F5F Stay Refreshed Power Users Overclocking The computer fails to start because of an XTU issue.

The computer fails to start because of an XTU issue.

The computer fails to start because of an XTU issue.

N
noahsent
Member
150
01-08-2016, 03:57 AM
#1
I experimented with XTU a bit and only increased my CPU's voltage by 1.00. Immediately after, my computer displayed a black screen. After waiting roughly 15 minutes it stayed black. I turned off the machine and tried to restart it, but the same issue persisted. I haven't made any changes in the BIOS, just in XTU, and I can't run any programs anymore. Can someone assist me with this?
N
noahsent
01-08-2016, 03:57 AM #1

I experimented with XTU a bit and only increased my CPU's voltage by 1.00. Immediately after, my computer displayed a black screen. After waiting roughly 15 minutes it stayed black. I turned off the machine and tried to restart it, but the same issue persisted. I haven't made any changes in the BIOS, just in XTU, and I can't run any programs anymore. Can someone assist me with this?

B
BakenCookies
Member
212
01-08-2016, 05:12 AM
#2
Usually, without a proper shutdown, XTU goes back to its default settings...
(We all wish the mentioned '1 V core jump/offset' never happened in the BIOS...)
B
BakenCookies
01-08-2016, 05:12 AM #2

Usually, without a proper shutdown, XTU goes back to its default settings...
(We all wish the mentioned '1 V core jump/offset' never happened in the BIOS...)

A
arc9819
Member
219
01-08-2016, 01:31 PM
#3
full system spec?
A
arc9819
01-08-2016, 01:31 PM #3

full system spec?

H
HitTom9886
Member
229
01-12-2016, 04:17 AM
#4
You increased the CPU Vcore by an integer value, not a fraction. That could damage the CPU.
H
HitTom9886
01-12-2016, 04:17 AM #4

You increased the CPU Vcore by an integer value, not a fraction. That could damage the CPU.

M
MrEpic_
Member
52
01-13-2016, 11:54 AM
#5
Does the system post to Bios? If yes, navigate to Bios and initiate the system in Safe Mode. This should stop it from applying your settings in XTU once more.
I question whether xtu supports increasing the VCore by 1.0v, though I'm not certain.
M
MrEpic_
01-13-2016, 11:54 AM #5

Does the system post to Bios? If yes, navigate to Bios and initiate the system in Safe Mode. This should stop it from applying your settings in XTU once more.
I question whether xtu supports increasing the VCore by 1.0v, though I'm not certain.

J
JustSano
Junior Member
46
01-16-2016, 02:11 PM
#6
Usually, without a proper shutdown, XTU goes back to its default settings...
(We all wish the mentioned '1 V core jump/offset' never happened in the BIOS...)
J
JustSano
01-16-2016, 02:11 PM #6

Usually, without a proper shutdown, XTU goes back to its default settings...
(We all wish the mentioned '1 V core jump/offset' never happened in the BIOS...)