F5F Stay Refreshed Power Users Overclocking Solved: 4790K Overclock for B85 Mobo

Solved: 4790K Overclock for B85 Mobo

Solved: 4790K Overclock for B85 Mobo

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Lucadagreat
Member
236
08-23-2016, 10:19 AM
#1
I've just upgraded my cooler to better utilize the 4790K's impressive overclocking potential.
I'm pleased with the results so far, temperatures staying below 68 during gaming with an OC of 4.6Ghz and 1.225VCore, compared to the 75-80s seen in older sessions of Mafia 3.
In short, I was curious if I could push it higher to a 4.7Ghz setup with a 1.27VCore on a B85 Asus Mobo.
Will there be any risk of damage or reduced lifespan?
Thanks in advance.
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Lucadagreat
08-23-2016, 10:19 AM #1

I've just upgraded my cooler to better utilize the 4790K's impressive overclocking potential.
I'm pleased with the results so far, temperatures staying below 68 during gaming with an OC of 4.6Ghz and 1.225VCore, compared to the 75-80s seen in older sessions of Mafia 3.
In short, I was curious if I could push it higher to a 4.7Ghz setup with a 1.27VCore on a B85 Asus Mobo.
Will there be any risk of damage or reduced lifespan?
Thanks in advance.

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ByWeaadox
Member
65
08-31-2016, 02:58 AM
#2
Your fine 68c suggests a 75c or higher with the 1.27v... I’m not sure about that. Personally, I wouldn’t go that far. There’s no real performance boost in games with that CPU at 4.6 or 4.7Ghz. Raising it to 4.7Ghz means you’ll need more voltage, which isn’t worth the extra 100Mhz unless you don’t notice. Stick with your current low-voltage setup. As for pushing it to 4.7Ghz, I’m sure it won’t harm the motherboard or CPU as long as the case stays cool with fans inside and outside. The CPU will handle it fine even at 85°C during gaming. But if you keep it at 85°C all the time, things might not last much longer—who knows how much damage it could cause?
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ByWeaadox
08-31-2016, 02:58 AM #2

Your fine 68c suggests a 75c or higher with the 1.27v... I’m not sure about that. Personally, I wouldn’t go that far. There’s no real performance boost in games with that CPU at 4.6 or 4.7Ghz. Raising it to 4.7Ghz means you’ll need more voltage, which isn’t worth the extra 100Mhz unless you don’t notice. Stick with your current low-voltage setup. As for pushing it to 4.7Ghz, I’m sure it won’t harm the motherboard or CPU as long as the case stays cool with fans inside and outside. The CPU will handle it fine even at 85°C during gaming. But if you keep it at 85°C all the time, things might not last much longer—who knows how much damage it could cause?

A
64
08-31-2016, 04:40 AM
#3
Your fine 68c suggests a 75c or higher with the 1.27v... I’m not sure about that. Personally, I wouldn’t go that far. There’s no real performance boost in games with that CPU at 4.6 or 4.7Ghz. Raising it to 4.7Ghz means you’ll need more voltage, which isn’t worth the extra 100Mhz unless you don’t notice. Stick with your current low-voltage setup. As for pushing it to 4.7Ghz, I’m sure it won’t harm the motherboard or CPU as long as the case stays cool with fans inside and outside. The CPU will handle it fine even at 85°C during gaming. But if you keep it at 85°C all the time, things might not last much longer—who knows how much damage it could cause?
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Awesomecraft15
08-31-2016, 04:40 AM #3

Your fine 68c suggests a 75c or higher with the 1.27v... I’m not sure about that. Personally, I wouldn’t go that far. There’s no real performance boost in games with that CPU at 4.6 or 4.7Ghz. Raising it to 4.7Ghz means you’ll need more voltage, which isn’t worth the extra 100Mhz unless you don’t notice. Stick with your current low-voltage setup. As for pushing it to 4.7Ghz, I’m sure it won’t harm the motherboard or CPU as long as the case stays cool with fans inside and outside. The CPU will handle it fine even at 85°C during gaming. But if you keep it at 85°C all the time, things might not last much longer—who knows how much damage it could cause?

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Night__Man
Member
144
09-01-2016, 10:24 PM
#4
Rusty, did you use any tutorials for that OC on 4790? I have one that works at .2 with Gigabyte auto-tune, but at .3 the voltage becomes unstable. I prefer doing it myself, though I haven’t found a reliable tutorial yet.
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Night__Man
09-01-2016, 10:24 PM #4

Rusty, did you use any tutorials for that OC on 4790? I have one that works at .2 with Gigabyte auto-tune, but at .3 the voltage becomes unstable. I prefer doing it myself, though I haven’t found a reliable tutorial yet.

D
Dqxter
Junior Member
20
09-02-2016, 03:27 AM
#5
I didn't rely on any, actually. Most guides simply apply excessive voltage, which varies with each CPU, so I handled it independently.
D
Dqxter
09-02-2016, 03:27 AM #5

I didn't rely on any, actually. Most guides simply apply excessive voltage, which varies with each CPU, so I handled it independently.

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Thunderbomb12
Member
61
09-02-2016, 04:30 AM
#6
There is a pretty noticeable difference at 4.7Ghz vs my current 4.6Ghz OC.
Also, this started happening this week.
When gaming if my temps rise to 67-68ºC it downclocks to base clocks, i've increased allowed TDP, Changed from Thermal Balance to Current Balance, Disabled EPU power saving but it still does it. Any ideas on what it could be?
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Thunderbomb12
09-02-2016, 04:30 AM #6

There is a pretty noticeable difference at 4.7Ghz vs my current 4.6Ghz OC.
Also, this started happening this week.
When gaming if my temps rise to 67-68ºC it downclocks to base clocks, i've increased allowed TDP, Changed from Thermal Balance to Current Balance, Disabled EPU power saving but it still does it. Any ideas on what it could be?

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JustLyfeee
Junior Member
7
09-21-2016, 10:20 AM
#7
The temperatures are nice, but I'm not sure what's causing the issue. It seems the CPU isn't reaching its full performance potential.
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JustLyfeee
09-21-2016, 10:20 AM #7

The temperatures are nice, but I'm not sure what's causing the issue. It seems the CPU isn't reaching its full performance potential.

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Sheik1soul
Senior Member
511
09-23-2016, 12:16 AM
#8
The issue isn't about the temperatures, it's that when it reaches them it slows down to prevent overheating in the 70s. A week ago I changed the cooler and took out the CPU to remove paste. I've tried all possible settings but nothing has helped. It just slows down to base clock or fully to 800Mhz during games.
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Sheik1soul
09-23-2016, 12:16 AM #8

The issue isn't about the temperatures, it's that when it reaches them it slows down to prevent overheating in the 70s. A week ago I changed the cooler and took out the CPU to remove paste. I've tried all possible settings but nothing has helped. It just slows down to base clock or fully to 800Mhz during games.

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ISY_0815
Senior Member
566
09-23-2016, 12:26 AM
#9
If the prior cooler worked well, the issue might lie in contact between the block and the CPU or the application of the thermal paste.
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ISY_0815
09-23-2016, 12:26 AM #9

If the prior cooler worked well, the issue might lie in contact between the block and the CPU or the application of the thermal paste.

O
ovcoming
Member
229
10-08-2016, 04:25 PM
#10
The CPU temperatures wouldn't be high, which is why I'm concerned. It seems like it's slowing down but still stays within safe limits.
O
ovcoming
10-08-2016, 04:25 PM #10

The CPU temperatures wouldn't be high, which is why I'm concerned. It seems like it's slowing down but still stays within safe limits.

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