F5F Stay Refreshed Power Users Overclocking The Ryzen 2700x reaches around 75°C during gameplay in Battlefield V, so there might be some space for an overclock.

The Ryzen 2700x reaches around 75°C during gameplay in Battlefield V, so there might be some space for an overclock.

The Ryzen 2700x reaches around 75°C during gameplay in Battlefield V, so there might be some space for an overclock.

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epicallee
Member
119
01-22-2018, 10:38 PM
#1
Hi,
I’m trying to boost my Ryzen 7 2700x’s performance but it’s heating up a lot. The cooler I use is a Corsair H115i pro. I’d like to know how much the temperature will rise and whether it’s safe to keep running at this level.
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epicallee
01-22-2018, 10:38 PM #1

Hi,
I’m trying to boost my Ryzen 7 2700x’s performance but it’s heating up a lot. The cooler I use is a Corsair H115i pro. I’d like to know how much the temperature will rise and whether it’s safe to keep running at this level.

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VinLark
Member
74
01-23-2018, 02:27 AM
#2
The temperatures are coming up around 75c, and it's advised not to push beyond or approach the 95c mark. Your H115i should suffice for the Ryzen processor; what case model are you using? You might gain more performance with extra intake and exhaust fans. Adding a fan to force air onto the VRM heat sink could help when using an AIO closed loop. What motherboard are you running?
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VinLark
01-23-2018, 02:27 AM #2

The temperatures are coming up around 75c, and it's advised not to push beyond or approach the 95c mark. Your H115i should suffice for the Ryzen processor; what case model are you using? You might gain more performance with extra intake and exhaust fans. Adding a fan to force air onto the VRM heat sink could help when using an AIO closed loop. What motherboard are you running?

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TobiasJelskov
Junior Member
16
01-23-2018, 02:38 AM
#3
Temperatures near the CPU die may exceed normal levels based on your Core Voltage settings.
With a H115i running under full load and a vcore of 1.4V, temperatures can reach 75°C or higher.
Lowering the vcore to 1.250V and checking boot behavior at stock frequency may resolve the issue.
Increasing the vcore gradually in small steps (0.01V) helps determine the optimal setting.
Each step affects heat generation exponentially; maintaining a stable, low vcore is essential.
Your 2700x with H110i under full load stays around 70°C at 1.375V and 4.2GHz OC.
Adjust based on your case airflow and surrounding temperatures for best results.
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TobiasJelskov
01-23-2018, 02:38 AM #3

Temperatures near the CPU die may exceed normal levels based on your Core Voltage settings.
With a H115i running under full load and a vcore of 1.4V, temperatures can reach 75°C or higher.
Lowering the vcore to 1.250V and checking boot behavior at stock frequency may resolve the issue.
Increasing the vcore gradually in small steps (0.01V) helps determine the optimal setting.
Each step affects heat generation exponentially; maintaining a stable, low vcore is essential.
Your 2700x with H110i under full load stays around 70°C at 1.375V and 4.2GHz OC.
Adjust based on your case airflow and surrounding temperatures for best results.

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mjt2789
Senior Member
483
01-26-2018, 06:32 AM
#4
Count Mike usually says there's no need to overclock a 2700x the 10% doesn't make a significant impact & there's nowhere more to go with it and nothing significant to be gained from it. If your vCore is too high, yes that could also cause higher than normal temps guess the h-series aren't absolute overkill cooling in any conditions but, sorting out the temps will stop any throttling you may be experiencing.
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mjt2789
01-26-2018, 06:32 AM #4

Count Mike usually says there's no need to overclock a 2700x the 10% doesn't make a significant impact & there's nowhere more to go with it and nothing significant to be gained from it. If your vCore is too high, yes that could also cause higher than normal temps guess the h-series aren't absolute overkill cooling in any conditions but, sorting out the temps will stop any throttling you may be experiencing.

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Fred10244
Posting Freak
937
01-26-2018, 07:31 AM
#5
I've checked more closely and it seems speccy works well for temperatures, while Ryzen Master shows readings up to about 60°C and a maximum of 65°C. I adjusted both fans in iCue to "extreme" as well; they were set to "quiet" before. When idle, the temps are around 32-37°C, which isn't extremely high.
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Fred10244
01-26-2018, 07:31 AM #5

I've checked more closely and it seems speccy works well for temperatures, while Ryzen Master shows readings up to about 60°C and a maximum of 65°C. I adjusted both fans in iCue to "extreme" as well; they were set to "quiet" before. When idle, the temps are around 32-37°C, which isn't extremely high.

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Frinex10
Posting Freak
806
01-26-2018, 04:22 PM
#6
Idle should be roughly 10 degrees higher than the ambient temperature, which appears acceptable considering likely ongoing background processes. Perhaps the issue stems from false readings, suggesting no action is necessary and everything remains stable.
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Frinex10
01-26-2018, 04:22 PM #6

Idle should be roughly 10 degrees higher than the ambient temperature, which appears acceptable considering likely ongoing background processes. Perhaps the issue stems from false readings, suggesting no action is necessary and everything remains stable.