F5F Stay Refreshed Power Users Overclocking ryzen 1700 OC to 4 gHZ

ryzen 1700 OC to 4 gHZ

ryzen 1700 OC to 4 gHZ

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miinecraft63
Junior Member
18
11-07-2017, 12:46 AM
#1
Which motherboard and cooler will you require to boost your Ryzen 1700 to 4 GHz performance? Thanks for your question.
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miinecraft63
11-07-2017, 12:46 AM #1

Which motherboard and cooler will you require to boost your Ryzen 1700 to 4 GHz performance? Thanks for your question.

A
Alex9304
Junior Member
12
11-07-2017, 01:09 AM
#2
Someone shared their experience about boosting a system to high speeds. They increased voltage from stock levels to 3.7ghz and then further to 3.9ghz, reaching up to 1.360v. Attempting 4ghz required even more power and caused excessive heat, often leading to crashes or shutdowns. They used a Gigabyte AB350m Gaming 3 with 16gb G.skill Trident Z 3000mhz and a Geekbench score of 3942. The system ran at 2133mhz RAM instead of the default 3000mhz. They also built a custom cooling setup including water loops, fans, pumps, and heat sinks, with the CPU temperature ranging between 190°C and 250°C.
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Alex9304
11-07-2017, 01:09 AM #2

Someone shared their experience about boosting a system to high speeds. They increased voltage from stock levels to 3.7ghz and then further to 3.9ghz, reaching up to 1.360v. Attempting 4ghz required even more power and caused excessive heat, often leading to crashes or shutdowns. They used a Gigabyte AB350m Gaming 3 with 16gb G.skill Trident Z 3000mhz and a Geekbench score of 3942. The system ran at 2133mhz RAM instead of the default 3000mhz. They also built a custom cooling setup including water loops, fans, pumps, and heat sinks, with the CPU temperature ranging between 190°C and 250°C.

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ash_n_brad
Posting Freak
778
11-09-2017, 07:00 AM
#3
There is no guarantee that a Ryzen 7 1700 will hit 4GHz on all cores. Unless you buy from here and use the same board they used and same cooler. https://siliconlottery.com/
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ash_n_brad
11-09-2017, 07:00 AM #3

There is no guarantee that a Ryzen 7 1700 will hit 4GHz on all cores. Unless you buy from here and use the same board they used and same cooler. https://siliconlottery.com/

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Kyski200
Member
60
11-25-2017, 10:36 AM
#4
There are numerous brands available, but the chipset must be AMD X370 or B350. For cooling solutions, you'll need a liquid cooler like Corsair H100i v2 or Cooler Master MasterLiquid Pro 280. MB OCing information can be found at the provided link. As mentioned by @theonerm2, it might not be possible to reach that level even for Jayz (youtuber), who achieved 1800x to 4k but later reduced it to 3.9k due to stability issues at 4k speed.
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Kyski200
11-25-2017, 10:36 AM #4

There are numerous brands available, but the chipset must be AMD X370 or B350. For cooling solutions, you'll need a liquid cooler like Corsair H100i v2 or Cooler Master MasterLiquid Pro 280. MB OCing information can be found at the provided link. As mentioned by @theonerm2, it might not be possible to reach that level even for Jayz (youtuber), who achieved 1800x to 4k but later reduced it to 3.9k due to stability issues at 4k speed.

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volcanix1000
Member
159
12-15-2017, 02:34 AM
#5
So should i oc to 3,9k to make it stable since there isnt much diff from 4 ?
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volcanix1000
12-15-2017, 02:34 AM #5

So should i oc to 3,9k to make it stable since there isnt much diff from 4 ?

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KlayDog1
Senior Member
685
12-15-2017, 06:37 AM
#6
Tell me about it, I'm running the Wraith Spire cooler, an Asus B350M-A, and my setup is at 3.7ghz with all eight cores. Geekbench 3 shows single core 3676 and multi-core 28250. It's an impressively fast machine.
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KlayDog1
12-15-2017, 06:37 AM #6

Tell me about it, I'm running the Wraith Spire cooler, an Asus B350M-A, and my setup is at 3.7ghz with all eight cores. Geekbench 3 shows single core 3676 and multi-core 28250. It's an impressively fast machine.

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noudoz
Junior Member
2
12-15-2017, 06:53 AM
#7
I increased the speed of a small device from its default to 3.7ghz on standard voltage, then boosted it further to 3.9ghz and reached up to 1.360v in total. Attempting 4ghz required significantly more voltage and caused excessive heat, making it impractical for an additional 100mhz gain; most of the time the VRMs overheated and the computer would shut down completely. The setup used a Gigabyte AB350m Gaming 3 with 16gb G.skill Trident Z 3000mhz, achieving a Geekbench score of 3942 on single core and 31537 on multicore, with RAM at 2133mhz instead of the default 3000mhz.
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noudoz
12-15-2017, 06:53 AM #7

I increased the speed of a small device from its default to 3.7ghz on standard voltage, then boosted it further to 3.9ghz and reached up to 1.360v in total. Attempting 4ghz required significantly more voltage and caused excessive heat, making it impractical for an additional 100mhz gain; most of the time the VRMs overheated and the computer would shut down completely. The setup used a Gigabyte AB350m Gaming 3 with 16gb G.skill Trident Z 3000mhz, achieving a Geekbench score of 3942 on single core and 31537 on multicore, with RAM at 2133mhz instead of the default 3000mhz.

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Balguren
Junior Member
45
01-06-2018, 12:57 AM
#8
I increased the speed to 3.7ghz on stock voltage, then boosted it to 3.9, reaching a peak of 1.360v. Aiming for 4ghz required significantly higher voltage and caused excessive heat, often leading to VRM failures and complete shutdowns. Running it on a Gigabyte AB350m Gaming 3 with 16gb G.skill Trident Z 3000mhz and 2133mhz RAM gave me a solid performance, achieving a score of 3942 on single core and 31537 on multicore.
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Balguren
01-06-2018, 12:57 AM #8

I increased the speed to 3.7ghz on stock voltage, then boosted it to 3.9, reaching a peak of 1.360v. Aiming for 4ghz required significantly higher voltage and caused excessive heat, often leading to VRM failures and complete shutdowns. Running it on a Gigabyte AB350m Gaming 3 with 16gb G.skill Trident Z 3000mhz and 2133mhz RAM gave me a solid performance, achieving a score of 3942 on single core and 31537 on multicore.

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samaclause
Member
142
01-06-2018, 05:01 PM
#9
I increased my board's speed to 3.7ghz on default settings, then boosted it to 3.9 and reached up to 1.360v. Attempting 4ghz required significantly more voltage and caused excessive heat, often leading to VRM failures and complete shutdowns. Running the system on a Gigabyte AB350m Gaming 3 with 16gb G.skill Trident Z 3000mhz, achieving a score of 3942 on single core and 31537 on multicore, was challenging due to higher temperatures. I installed a custom water loop with multiple fans and coolers, which helped manage heat. The VRMs were the main issue, not the CPU. I added an Antec Spotcool later to improve cooling, but I haven't pushed further overclocking yet; it seems the system runs well at the current settings.
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samaclause
01-06-2018, 05:01 PM #9

I increased my board's speed to 3.7ghz on default settings, then boosted it to 3.9 and reached up to 1.360v. Attempting 4ghz required significantly more voltage and caused excessive heat, often leading to VRM failures and complete shutdowns. Running the system on a Gigabyte AB350m Gaming 3 with 16gb G.skill Trident Z 3000mhz, achieving a score of 3942 on single core and 31537 on multicore, was challenging due to higher temperatures. I installed a custom water loop with multiple fans and coolers, which helped manage heat. The VRMs were the main issue, not the CPU. I added an Antec Spotcool later to improve cooling, but I haven't pushed further overclocking yet; it seems the system runs well at the current settings.

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KaikoShion
Junior Member
13
01-07-2018, 04:57 AM
#10
I would choose a Deepcool Captain ex 120mm personally. However, my CPU is OC'd to 5 GHz and it never reaches the highest temperatures I experience, which are around 65 degrees Celsius. Please note I'm using an FX series. http://prntscr.com/f2ua8e Also, I feel lucky with this CPU.
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KaikoShion
01-07-2018, 04:57 AM #10

I would choose a Deepcool Captain ex 120mm personally. However, my CPU is OC'd to 5 GHz and it never reaches the highest temperatures I experience, which are around 65 degrees Celsius. Please note I'm using an FX series. http://prntscr.com/f2ua8e Also, I feel lucky with this CPU.

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