F5F Stay Refreshed Power Users Overclocking Ryzen 5 1500x

Ryzen 5 1500x

Ryzen 5 1500x

S
Sebzstar
Junior Member
4
10-28-2017, 01:06 PM
#1
I'm trying to get better at overclocking my Ryzen 5 1500X on a B350 Tomahawk board. I have a Ryzen 5 1500x with the stock Wraith cooler. Do anyone know a safe setting that won't cause overheating with the stock cooler? I just want something stable to practice on, and plan to upgrade later.
S
Sebzstar
10-28-2017, 01:06 PM #1

I'm trying to get better at overclocking my Ryzen 5 1500X on a B350 Tomahawk board. I have a Ryzen 5 1500x with the stock Wraith cooler. Do anyone know a safe setting that won't cause overheating with the stock cooler? I just want something stable to practice on, and plan to upgrade later.

I
iTzDMaR_
Junior Member
48
10-28-2017, 09:49 PM
#2
In most situations, achieving a multiplier of 37 without altering the voltage is feasible. Simply access the BIOS, adjust the CPU multiplier/Core Ratio to 37.0, save your changes and close. This should work reliably if your chip meets the minimum requirements. A value of 3.8 remains achievable, though it may need minor voltage tweaks—especially once you install an aftermarket cooler. The stock cooler can still deliver satisfactory results.
I
iTzDMaR_
10-28-2017, 09:49 PM #2

In most situations, achieving a multiplier of 37 without altering the voltage is feasible. Simply access the BIOS, adjust the CPU multiplier/Core Ratio to 37.0, save your changes and close. This should work reliably if your chip meets the minimum requirements. A value of 3.8 remains achievable, though it may need minor voltage tweaks—especially once you install an aftermarket cooler. The stock cooler can still deliver satisfactory results.

N
NinatoPvP
Posting Freak
899
10-30-2017, 08:00 AM
#3
In most situations, achieving a multiplier of 37 without altering the voltage is feasible. Simply access the BIOS, adjust the CPU multiplier/Core Ratio to 37.0, save your changes and close. This should work reliably if your chip meets the minimum requirements. A value of 3.8 remains achievable, though it may need minor voltage tweaks—especially once you install an aftermarket cooler. The stock cooler can still deliver satisfactory results.
N
NinatoPvP
10-30-2017, 08:00 AM #3

In most situations, achieving a multiplier of 37 without altering the voltage is feasible. Simply access the BIOS, adjust the CPU multiplier/Core Ratio to 37.0, save your changes and close. This should work reliably if your chip meets the minimum requirements. A value of 3.8 remains achievable, though it may need minor voltage tweaks—especially once you install an aftermarket cooler. The stock cooler can still deliver satisfactory results.