F5F Stay Refreshed Power Users Overclocking The Asrock h97m pro4 fails to identify SSD or GPU components.

The Asrock h97m pro4 fails to identify SSD or GPU components.

The Asrock h97m pro4 fails to identify SSD or GPU components.

H
husker53
Posting Freak
802
04-12-2016, 09:01 AM
#1
I purchased an asrock h97m pro4 mobo with a pentium g3258, intending to overclock. It has oil cooling, so I attempted to lower the clock to 5.0mhz and suspect something might have been damaged. I adjusted the system settings: voltage offset for agent, CPU analog and digital IO offsets, and Vcore override to 1.5. Are any of these values excessively high? Could this be causing damage to the motherboard, GPU, SSD, or power supply?
H
husker53
04-12-2016, 09:01 AM #1

I purchased an asrock h97m pro4 mobo with a pentium g3258, intending to overclock. It has oil cooling, so I attempted to lower the clock to 5.0mhz and suspect something might have been damaged. I adjusted the system settings: voltage offset for agent, CPU analog and digital IO offsets, and Vcore override to 1.5. Are any of these values excessively high? Could this be causing damage to the motherboard, GPU, SSD, or power supply?

G
genis260
Member
53
04-15-2016, 07:50 AM
#2
Clear the CMOS, then restart to verify the PC identifies the SSD/GPU. Also inspect the CPU and its socket for any signs of damage.
G
genis260
04-15-2016, 07:50 AM #2

Clear the CMOS, then restart to verify the PC identifies the SSD/GPU. Also inspect the CPU and its socket for any signs of damage.

C
ChadlyG
Member
171
04-15-2016, 03:58 PM
#3
Clear the CMOS, then restart to verify the PC identifies the SSD/GPU. Also inspect the CPU and its socket for any signs of damage.
C
ChadlyG
04-15-2016, 03:58 PM #3

Clear the CMOS, then restart to verify the PC identifies the SSD/GPU. Also inspect the CPU and its socket for any signs of damage.