F5F Stay Refreshed Power Users Overclocking The CPU successfully completed all stress tests yet triggered a blue screen during validation with CPU-Z.

The CPU successfully completed all stress tests yet triggered a blue screen during validation with CPU-Z.

The CPU successfully completed all stress tests yet triggered a blue screen during validation with CPU-Z.

X
60
10-05-2018, 08:49 AM
#1
Hey guys,
actually I'm having a different problem but when I was trying to validate with CPU-Z I'm getting a bluescreen.
So at first, I need to know why this happens before I can come to the next problem.
Every stresstest is just going fine, no temperatures over 72°C on average even if I stresstest for an hour.
This is my system:
Name: skrippi
CPU: i9-9900k
Motherboard: Asus Prime Z390-A
CPU Voltage: 1.295V
CPU Bus Speed/Multiplier: 100*50
Clock Speed: 5.0GHz
AVX Offset: 1
RAM: Corsair 8192 MB (DDR4-2137) - XMP 2.0
Cooling: Watercooling Loop
OS: Win10 Pro x64
I did this OC guide:
View: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bM5XO96b4G0
And the following pictures show my settings in BIOS:
X
X_pinkie_pie_Z
10-05-2018, 08:49 AM #1

Hey guys,
actually I'm having a different problem but when I was trying to validate with CPU-Z I'm getting a bluescreen.
So at first, I need to know why this happens before I can come to the next problem.
Every stresstest is just going fine, no temperatures over 72°C on average even if I stresstest for an hour.
This is my system:
Name: skrippi
CPU: i9-9900k
Motherboard: Asus Prime Z390-A
CPU Voltage: 1.295V
CPU Bus Speed/Multiplier: 100*50
Clock Speed: 5.0GHz
AVX Offset: 1
RAM: Corsair 8192 MB (DDR4-2137) - XMP 2.0
Cooling: Watercooling Loop
OS: Win10 Pro x64
I did this OC guide:
View: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bM5XO96b4G0
And the following pictures show my settings in BIOS:

K
kiekie
Member
64
10-05-2018, 10:22 AM
#2
Question. Was it a matter of following the guide or simply copying it? Each CPU is unique, so what functions for one may not suit another. Only the underlying theory applies. The precise values might vary, which means you can safely push the turbo to locked core 5.0GHz, but achieving an exact 1.275v with specific components like an LLC might not be ideal if your CPU requires 1.278v at that setting. Alternatively, you could end up needing a lower voltage, such as 1.208v. You'll have to make adjustments somewhere, customize your overclocking to fit the CPU, because a direct copy won't work.
K
kiekie
10-05-2018, 10:22 AM #2

Question. Was it a matter of following the guide or simply copying it? Each CPU is unique, so what functions for one may not suit another. Only the underlying theory applies. The precise values might vary, which means you can safely push the turbo to locked core 5.0GHz, but achieving an exact 1.275v with specific components like an LLC might not be ideal if your CPU requires 1.278v at that setting. Alternatively, you could end up needing a lower voltage, such as 1.208v. You'll have to make adjustments somewhere, customize your overclocking to fit the CPU, because a direct copy won't work.

S
Sushi292
Member
179
10-06-2018, 06:06 AM
#3
Did you execute minor commands on OCCT? It might be too weak to maintain maximum load.
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Sushi292
10-06-2018, 06:06 AM #3

Did you execute minor commands on OCCT? It might be too weak to maintain maximum load.

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RocketMan109
Junior Member
44
10-07-2018, 07:08 PM
#4
I believe you didn't quite grasp the issue: under load everything seems okay.
But clicking "validate" in CPU-Z without any load triggers a blue screen in Windows.
Returning to default BIOS settings without OC resolves the problem.
Edit: It seems you were correct after all. I ended up with 1.320 V and it worked.
Thank you very much!
R
RocketMan109
10-07-2018, 07:08 PM #4

I believe you didn't quite grasp the issue: under load everything seems okay.
But clicking "validate" in CPU-Z without any load triggers a blue screen in Windows.
Returning to default BIOS settings without OC resolves the problem.
Edit: It seems you were correct after all. I ended up with 1.320 V and it worked.
Thank you very much!

B
bradleylegb
Junior Member
9
10-09-2018, 01:39 AM
#5
Well, you didn’t answer my question either lol. There are three distinct tests for OCCT and the choice to enable AVX for each. When dealing with large instructions, the CPU testing is minimal. Smaller instructions are necessary to ensure stability.
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bradleylegb
10-09-2018, 01:39 AM #5

Well, you didn’t answer my question either lol. There are three distinct tests for OCCT and the choice to enable AVX for each. When dealing with large instructions, the CPU testing is minimal. Smaller instructions are necessary to ensure stability.

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xXFirewitherXx
Posting Freak
878
10-09-2018, 09:36 AM
#6
Thank you for your message. The latest OCCT version appears distinct from the tutorials, so I should select "small data packages." There seems to be no instructions provided. Regarding stability tests, it might be necessary to run AVX.
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xXFirewitherXx
10-09-2018, 09:36 AM #6

Thank you for your message. The latest OCCT version appears distinct from the tutorials, so I should select "small data packages." There seems to be no instructions provided. Regarding stability tests, it might be necessary to run AVX.

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stevenreding
Junior Member
20
10-15-2018, 09:23 PM
#7
Data packages are correct. AVX isn't essential unless you intend to execute programs that rely on them on your processor.
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stevenreding
10-15-2018, 09:23 PM #7

Data packages are correct. AVX isn't essential unless you intend to execute programs that rely on them on your processor.

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ButterSlaps55
Junior Member
5
10-17-2018, 02:23 PM
#8
Question. Was it a matter of following the guide or simply copying it? Each CPU is unique, so what functions for one may not suit another. Only the underlying theory applies. The precise values might vary, which means you can safely push the turbo to locked core 5.0GHz, but fine-tuning an exact 1.275v with specific components like an LLC might not be ideal if your CPU requires 1.278v at that setting. Alternatively, you could end up needing a lower voltage, such as 1.208v. You'll have to make adjustments somewhere, customize your overclocking to fit the CPU, because a direct copy won't work.
B
ButterSlaps55
10-17-2018, 02:23 PM #8

Question. Was it a matter of following the guide or simply copying it? Each CPU is unique, so what functions for one may not suit another. Only the underlying theory applies. The precise values might vary, which means you can safely push the turbo to locked core 5.0GHz, but fine-tuning an exact 1.275v with specific components like an LLC might not be ideal if your CPU requires 1.278v at that setting. Alternatively, you could end up needing a lower voltage, such as 1.208v. You'll have to make adjustments somewhere, customize your overclocking to fit the CPU, because a direct copy won't work.