F5F Stay Refreshed Hardware Desktop Undervolting appears essential for Ryzen 5000 models

Undervolting appears essential for Ryzen 5000 models

Undervolting appears essential for Ryzen 5000 models

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Shytriix
Junior Member
15
03-11-2016, 10:41 PM
#1
I quickly dropped my R5 5600x after purchase, but a BIOS update caused me to reset settings. I decided to run the machine at its default voltage to test performance alongside my new Scythe Fuma 2. Initially, temperatures rose slightly, though the cooler worked a bit faster. After undervolting, boost clocks became much more consistent—about 200 MHz less under heavy load. Even with full load testing via OCCT, the CPU kept boosting all cores to around 4650MHz instead of spiking. Unless the chip is faulty, I believe it’s essential for stability; my -30% voltage setting seems to work well without any issues for weeks now. Lower temperatures and longer lifespan are likely benefits, though that’s hard to confirm. What do others think? Have you tried this? Did the silicone upgrade perform well? Just to clarify, this isn’t about older overvolting Ryzen models but the newer ones with official BIOS support. This clearly explains the process.
S
Shytriix
03-11-2016, 10:41 PM #1

I quickly dropped my R5 5600x after purchase, but a BIOS update caused me to reset settings. I decided to run the machine at its default voltage to test performance alongside my new Scythe Fuma 2. Initially, temperatures rose slightly, though the cooler worked a bit faster. After undervolting, boost clocks became much more consistent—about 200 MHz less under heavy load. Even with full load testing via OCCT, the CPU kept boosting all cores to around 4650MHz instead of spiking. Unless the chip is faulty, I believe it’s essential for stability; my -30% voltage setting seems to work well without any issues for weeks now. Lower temperatures and longer lifespan are likely benefits, though that’s hard to confirm. What do others think? Have you tried this? Did the silicone upgrade perform well? Just to clarify, this isn’t about older overvolting Ryzen models but the newer ones with official BIOS support. This clearly explains the process.

C
Cha0s_C0ntr0l
Junior Member
8
03-11-2016, 10:41 PM
#2
Ryzen tracks its own temperatures, which helps boost performance when under-volting due to improved thermal management. With sufficient cooling, using the stock V-core might provide similar gains. Most aftermarket coolers are designed for their rated power dissipation, often operating near throttle limits, leading to reduced sustained boost speeds. Edited April 10, 2021 by ShrimpBrime
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Cha0s_C0ntr0l
03-11-2016, 10:41 PM #2

Ryzen tracks its own temperatures, which helps boost performance when under-volting due to improved thermal management. With sufficient cooling, using the stock V-core might provide similar gains. Most aftermarket coolers are designed for their rated power dissipation, often operating near throttle limits, leading to reduced sustained boost speeds. Edited April 10, 2021 by ShrimpBrime

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Turquose
Member
198
03-11-2016, 10:41 PM
#3
It seems the issue relates more to the PBO restrictions you turn off while setting up. The system was already slowing down early, even at high temps, so I should test its behavior when those limits are removed but not through aggressive undervolting.
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Turquose
03-11-2016, 10:41 PM #3

It seems the issue relates more to the PBO restrictions you turn off while setting up. The system was already slowing down early, even at high temps, so I should test its behavior when those limits are removed but not through aggressive undervolting.

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loick3333
Member
119
03-11-2016, 10:41 PM
#4
Power settings are mainly limited by amp readings. When Ryzen Master is active, you can raise the EDC limiter for higher performance. Disabling PBO lets the CPU run at its full power state. With PBO on auto, it provides standard boosting and better efficiency. Lowering temperatures improves results with auto and enabled mode, so a negative adjustment aids cooling. But the CPU cannot exceed its maximum boost even with reduced temps, so manual overclocking is necessary.
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loick3333
03-11-2016, 10:41 PM #4

Power settings are mainly limited by amp readings. When Ryzen Master is active, you can raise the EDC limiter for higher performance. Disabling PBO lets the CPU run at its full power state. With PBO on auto, it provides standard boosting and better efficiency. Lowering temperatures improves results with auto and enabled mode, so a negative adjustment aids cooling. But the CPU cannot exceed its maximum boost even with reduced temps, so manual overclocking is necessary.

X
197
03-11-2016, 10:41 PM
#5
The tool adjusts the frequency curve instead of lowering voltage directly. You’re shifting the timing without reducing power, letting you achieve faster clocks with lower voltage.
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x_HmOoDy_KsA_x
03-11-2016, 10:41 PM #5

The tool adjusts the frequency curve instead of lowering voltage directly. You’re shifting the timing without reducing power, letting you achieve faster clocks with lower voltage.