F5F Stay Refreshed Power Users Overclocking The I5 6600k is limited to a maximum speed of 4.6 GHz.

The I5 6600k is limited to a maximum speed of 4.6 GHz.

The I5 6600k is limited to a maximum speed of 4.6 GHz.

O
oHits
Member
176
11-21-2016, 02:32 AM
#1
I'm testing my 6600k at 4.6Ghz with 1.355V. I'm aiming for 4.8V but whenever I adjust the BIOS voltage to 1.360V or more, the system keeps crashing during Cinebench tests. No matter the change, it fails. Any advice? Thanks ahead.
O
oHits
11-21-2016, 02:32 AM #1

I'm testing my 6600k at 4.6Ghz with 1.355V. I'm aiming for 4.8V but whenever I adjust the BIOS voltage to 1.360V or more, the system keeps crashing during Cinebench tests. No matter the change, it fails. Any advice? Thanks ahead.

M
Mudkip26
Junior Member
33
11-23-2016, 03:12 AM
#2
The boundaries of the specific chip remain unchanged. It's worth noting that achieving 200mhz offers minimal gains in performance.
M
Mudkip26
11-23-2016, 03:12 AM #2

The boundaries of the specific chip remain unchanged. It's worth noting that achieving 200mhz offers minimal gains in performance.

S
Sihere
Member
187
11-27-2016, 05:12 AM
#3
The boundaries of the specific chip remain unchanged. It's worth noting that achieving 200mhz offers minimal gains in performance.
S
Sihere
11-27-2016, 05:12 AM #3

The boundaries of the specific chip remain unchanged. It's worth noting that achieving 200mhz offers minimal gains in performance.

C
Caribbean_Blue
Senior Member
609
11-27-2016, 03:59 PM
#4
I need to admit I didn't reach 1.4V, possibly because I didn't add enough... But honestly, I might just stop here.
C
Caribbean_Blue
11-27-2016, 03:59 PM #4

I need to admit I didn't reach 1.4V, possibly because I didn't add enough... But honestly, I might just stop here.

E
ECFatula
Member
62
11-27-2016, 09:46 PM
#5
It's not the motherboard, it's not the cooling, maybe your power supply isn't strong enough (not enough watts). But I believe the main issue is that 4.6gh is quite high and your PC has hit its stability limit—it can't go any higher. No matter the reason, the clock speed is already very low for most tasks (gaming, editing, etc.), so you probably don't need more. If you're an overclocking fanatic and want to push your CPU's limits, it might be the best you can do.
E
ECFatula
11-27-2016, 09:46 PM #5

It's not the motherboard, it's not the cooling, maybe your power supply isn't strong enough (not enough watts). But I believe the main issue is that 4.6gh is quite high and your PC has hit its stability limit—it can't go any higher. No matter the reason, the clock speed is already very low for most tasks (gaming, editing, etc.), so you probably don't need more. If you're an overclocking fanatic and want to push your CPU's limits, it might be the best you can do.