This Ryzen 7 1700 at 3.75ghz and 1.32v Cinebench R15 1627cb performance is quite impressive.
This Ryzen 7 1700 at 3.75ghz and 1.32v Cinebench R15 1627cb performance is quite impressive.
You recently increased your Ryzen 7 1700's overclocking and achieved a solid score of 1627. Your idle temperature stayed between 37 and 43 degrees, but it peaked at 78 degrees during the test. It seems your voltage might have been too high for such intense performance, which could pose risks if sustained.
Regardless of the outcome, execute the Prime95 stress test to confirm. It's important to ensure your CPU isn't operating under unstable conditions, and this tool is ideal for that purpose.
It's around this point I'd stop. Running something like Prime95 for about half an hour to an hour should show the temperature peaks. I'd aim to keep it under 80°C if possible.
Seems a bit above average at first glance. The stock recorded a score of 1700 with a clock speed between 3.5 and 3.7 GHz, placing it in the 1400s range, whereas another model at 4.0 GHz reached the 1700s (score in the 1700s). Your model appears closer to the 4.0 GHz side even though its speed is nearer the lower end, which is somewhat unusual. A peak temperature of up to 78 degrees is a bit excessive, though not harmful—just not ideal.
The voltage at 1.32 V is acceptable, staying within the safe range for Ryzen (1.35–1.4 V). However, the temperatures are a bit high. What cooling solution are you using?
Still, the maximum of 78 seems quite low. As discussed, execute the Prime95 stress test to verify stability. Run it for a minimum of an hour, ideally longer (3-6 hours would be ideal). If everything holds steady and temperatures stay below 80, I’d stop here and proceed with your current configuration.
Regardless of the outcome, execute the Prime95 stress test to confirm everything is stable. Avoid any issues with your CPU under inconsistent conditions, and Prime95 provides the most effective solution.
I plan to test Prime 95. My OC is at 3.75ghz before, using 1.24v and I was playing BF1 in the upper 50s to mid 60s. I was surprised by how well the CPU performed and why it stayed cool despite the lower voltage. It was disappointing that the CPU didn’t overheat even at 1.24v, especially since all eight cores ran at full capacity during normal use. My core usage for other high-tier games like BF1 is typically in the 40 to 50 percentile range.