F5F Stay Refreshed Power Users Overclocking Ryzen 3 1300x overclock

Ryzen 3 1300x overclock

Ryzen 3 1300x overclock

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_Arctos_
Member
63
02-20-2016, 04:43 PM
#1
I need to find the appropriate voltage settings to reach the desired overclock levels for your Ryzen 3 1300X.
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_Arctos_
02-20-2016, 04:43 PM #1

I need to find the appropriate voltage settings to reach the desired overclock levels for your Ryzen 3 1300X.

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CptCookies12
Member
134
02-20-2016, 11:27 PM
#2
Your motherboard is quite specific about voltage requirements, but generally, most models operate best around 1.4 volts for 3.9-4.0Gigahertz. A good starting point is to keep the CPU core voltage in AUTO mode and adjust the multiplier to 39 for a 3.9Ghz setting. After booting up, check the actual voltage it applies. This method can help you find a stable configuration. If the system runs smoothly in Windows, consider running a stress test to verify stability. Then gradually lower the voltage until you reach a consistent level.
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CptCookies12
02-20-2016, 11:27 PM #2

Your motherboard is quite specific about voltage requirements, but generally, most models operate best around 1.4 volts for 3.9-4.0Gigahertz. A good starting point is to keep the CPU core voltage in AUTO mode and adjust the multiplier to 39 for a 3.9Ghz setting. After booting up, check the actual voltage it applies. This method can help you find a stable configuration. If the system runs smoothly in Windows, consider running a stress test to verify stability. Then gradually lower the voltage until you reach a consistent level.

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DarylDixon11
Junior Member
19
02-25-2016, 12:13 AM
#3
Your motherboard model is quite specific, but generally the voltage requirements are a bit varied. Around 1.4 volts is usually considered standard for 3.9-4.0Gigahertz systems. A good approach is to keep the CPU core voltage in AUTO mode, adjust the multiplier to 39 for 3.9Ghz, and then check the actual voltage it applies. This can serve as a starting point. It might even work well enough for stable overclocking, as demonstrated on my system with an 1700 board running on a B350 Mortar at 3.925Ghz.

If the system boots into Windows smoothly, consider running a stress test to verify stability. If successful, manually set the voltage and re-test to confirm. Gradually lower it until you reach the lowest stable setting. The only concern would be if the board maintains a consistent voltage above 1.45, in which case you should reduce it as quickly as possible.

I prefer keeping the voltage in AUTO mode since it naturally adjusts when the system is idle.
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DarylDixon11
02-25-2016, 12:13 AM #3

Your motherboard model is quite specific, but generally the voltage requirements are a bit varied. Around 1.4 volts is usually considered standard for 3.9-4.0Gigahertz systems. A good approach is to keep the CPU core voltage in AUTO mode, adjust the multiplier to 39 for 3.9Ghz, and then check the actual voltage it applies. This can serve as a starting point. It might even work well enough for stable overclocking, as demonstrated on my system with an 1700 board running on a B350 Mortar at 3.925Ghz.

If the system boots into Windows smoothly, consider running a stress test to verify stability. If successful, manually set the voltage and re-test to confirm. Gradually lower it until you reach the lowest stable setting. The only concern would be if the board maintains a consistent voltage above 1.45, in which case you should reduce it as quickly as possible.

I prefer keeping the voltage in AUTO mode since it naturally adjusts when the system is idle.

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Playered_401
Member
60
02-26-2016, 07:06 AM
#4
did you turn on axmp for ram prior to adjusting the cpu's overclock settings?
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Playered_401
02-26-2016, 07:06 AM #4

did you turn on axmp for ram prior to adjusting the cpu's overclock settings?

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Dashy88
Junior Member
2
02-26-2016, 11:42 AM
#5
did you turn on axmp for ram prior to increasing the cpu speed ? i believe many agree to achieve a consistent overclock by focusing first on the cpu.
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Dashy88
02-26-2016, 11:42 AM #5

did you turn on axmp for ram prior to increasing the cpu speed ? i believe many agree to achieve a consistent overclock by focusing first on the cpu.

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xjulien9
Member
62
03-01-2016, 06:47 AM
#6
using the ram at axmp will already provide a boost of 200 mgz without needing to adjust the cpu multiplier or voltages.
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xjulien9
03-01-2016, 06:47 AM #6

using the ram at axmp will already provide a boost of 200 mgz without needing to adjust the cpu multiplier or voltages.