F5F Stay Refreshed Hardware Desktop Ryzen 5 1600AF OC model

Ryzen 5 1600AF OC model

Ryzen 5 1600AF OC model

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taseen04
Junior Member
17
01-01-2026, 02:46 AM
#1
Hello, your Ryzen 5 1600AF is running at 4GHZ with 1.55V, which is quite high. The TDP is listed as 65W, but you're seeing around 120W under load and temperatures near 75°C. It looks like the system is pushing limits. You might want to lower the overclock slightly or consider adjustments to keep things stable and safe.
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taseen04
01-01-2026, 02:46 AM #1

Hello, your Ryzen 5 1600AF is running at 4GHZ with 1.55V, which is quite high. The TDP is listed as 65W, but you're seeing around 120W under load and temperatures near 75°C. It looks like the system is pushing limits. You might want to lower the overclock slightly or consider adjustments to keep things stable and safe.

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PatBagz
Junior Member
13
01-03-2026, 12:35 PM
#2
The AM4 connector supports up to 142 watts, which is suitable for your needs. Running at 75°C during a CPU stress test is acceptable. Voltage could be slightly higher, but that shouldn't cause concern as long as the temperature remains stable. If it stays consistent, continue using it.
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PatBagz
01-03-2026, 12:35 PM #2

The AM4 connector supports up to 142 watts, which is suitable for your needs. Running at 75°C during a CPU stress test is acceptable. Voltage could be slightly higher, but that shouldn't cause concern as long as the temperature remains stable. If it stays consistent, continue using it.

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DerpyMarta
Junior Member
5
01-04-2026, 05:38 AM
#3
Thank you.
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DerpyMarta
01-04-2026, 05:38 AM #3

Thank you.

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Brochette
Junior Member
35
01-04-2026, 10:49 AM
#4
Confirming the need for 1.55v at 4ghz? Consider cutting down to 200-300mhz and using 1.3-1.35v instead. Once you exceed 1.4v, efficiency drops sharply. Power use matters, especially if you plan to swap the CPU in about a year—like with a Ryzen 5 5500/5600 which is affordable. It’s worth testing how much 12nm voltage can handle and what the long-term effects are. Don’t worry about immediate breakdowns; just observe the gradual decline.
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Brochette
01-04-2026, 10:49 AM #4

Confirming the need for 1.55v at 4ghz? Consider cutting down to 200-300mhz and using 1.3-1.35v instead. Once you exceed 1.4v, efficiency drops sharply. Power use matters, especially if you plan to swap the CPU in about a year—like with a Ryzen 5 5500/5600 which is affordable. It’s worth testing how much 12nm voltage can handle and what the long-term effects are. Don’t worry about immediate breakdowns; just observe the gradual decline.

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ManaWild
Junior Member
8
01-06-2026, 08:01 AM
#5
Consider adjusting the voltage to 1.4 volts or lower if conditions remain favorable.
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ManaWild
01-06-2026, 08:01 AM #5

Consider adjusting the voltage to 1.4 volts or lower if conditions remain favorable.

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216
01-20-2026, 07:37 AM
#6
For better performance and CPU health, aim for 1.3–1.35v. If you ignore efficiency or CPU protection, 1.55v is fine since temperatures remain acceptable.
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HauntingShadow
01-20-2026, 07:37 AM #6

For better performance and CPU health, aim for 1.3–1.35v. If you ignore efficiency or CPU protection, 1.55v is fine since temperatures remain acceptable.