F5F Stay Refreshed Power Users Overclocking What am I doing wrong?

What am I doing wrong?

What am I doing wrong?

C
coollozzo
Junior Member
4
10-06-2016, 10:50 PM
#1
I am trying overclocking for the first time and not seeing the expected improvements. Here is my configuration:
CPU: i5-3570k (stock clock = 3.4ghz)
CPU cooler: Noctua NH-D15 with Arctic MX-4
Motherboard: Gigabyte Z55-D3H
Power supply: Akasa AK-PA075AM01 VenomPower 750w

The internet suggests that reaching 4.5ghz should be straightforward with this processor.
My progress thus far has been:
I adjusted the clock multiplier from 34 to 45 in BIOS, leaving other parameters as auto. This allowed me to boot into Windows but triggered a BSOD shortly after.
Then I lowered the multiplier back to 45 and kept everything auto. Under these conditions it seems stable enough (no BSOD during regular use – no thorough stability tests yet).
Thus, 4.4ghz appears to be my ceiling with automatic settings. I returned to BIOS, increased the multiplier again to 45, set CPU vcore to manual and raised it from the default 1.235 to 1.25. This time I failed to boot Windows and received a BIOS error indicating my configuration wouldn’t work.
Believing the processor wasn’t receiving enough power, I further increased the voltage to 1.275. This attempt ended without a BIOS alert – only a black screen appeared, and the fans didn’t spin (case fans did). I had to reset CMOS, and now I’m back at 4.4ghz with automatic settings, which seems fine.
I’m wondering if this isn’t the hardware limit: What mistakes did I make? How can I surpass 4.4ghz?

EDIT: Using CPU-Z, I checked the voltage setting at 4.4ghz and it fluctuates around 1.14 during idle but jumps to over 1.30 when I open a browser – the highest I’ve observed so far is 1.38. This seems unusually high. What could be causing this? Is there a way to resolve it?

My CPU core temperatures remain between 20 and 30°C at idle.**
C
coollozzo
10-06-2016, 10:50 PM #1

I am trying overclocking for the first time and not seeing the expected improvements. Here is my configuration:
CPU: i5-3570k (stock clock = 3.4ghz)
CPU cooler: Noctua NH-D15 with Arctic MX-4
Motherboard: Gigabyte Z55-D3H
Power supply: Akasa AK-PA075AM01 VenomPower 750w

The internet suggests that reaching 4.5ghz should be straightforward with this processor.
My progress thus far has been:
I adjusted the clock multiplier from 34 to 45 in BIOS, leaving other parameters as auto. This allowed me to boot into Windows but triggered a BSOD shortly after.
Then I lowered the multiplier back to 45 and kept everything auto. Under these conditions it seems stable enough (no BSOD during regular use – no thorough stability tests yet).
Thus, 4.4ghz appears to be my ceiling with automatic settings. I returned to BIOS, increased the multiplier again to 45, set CPU vcore to manual and raised it from the default 1.235 to 1.25. This time I failed to boot Windows and received a BIOS error indicating my configuration wouldn’t work.
Believing the processor wasn’t receiving enough power, I further increased the voltage to 1.275. This attempt ended without a BIOS alert – only a black screen appeared, and the fans didn’t spin (case fans did). I had to reset CMOS, and now I’m back at 4.4ghz with automatic settings, which seems fine.
I’m wondering if this isn’t the hardware limit: What mistakes did I make? How can I surpass 4.4ghz?

EDIT: Using CPU-Z, I checked the voltage setting at 4.4ghz and it fluctuates around 1.14 during idle but jumps to over 1.30 when I open a browser – the highest I’ve observed so far is 1.38. This seems unusually high. What could be causing this? Is there a way to resolve it?

My CPU core temperatures remain between 20 and 30°C at idle.**

T
tonykart18
Member
66
10-08-2016, 10:46 AM
#2
The key issue is beginning your overclock at an excessive setting and then reducing it, which is counterproductive. A precise overclock isn't assured, you receive what comes out. Begin with a milder adjustment, then evaluate stability. Gradually raise speed and voltages while checking for consistency, until you identify the maximum possible limits for your setup.
T
tonykart18
10-08-2016, 10:46 AM #2

The key issue is beginning your overclock at an excessive setting and then reducing it, which is counterproductive. A precise overclock isn't assured, you receive what comes out. Begin with a milder adjustment, then evaluate stability. Gradually raise speed and voltages while checking for consistency, until you identify the maximum possible limits for your setup.

R
Remoow
Junior Member
15
10-19-2016, 04:24 PM
#3
The key issue is beginning your overclock at a high setting and then reducing it, which is counterproductive. A precise overclock isn't guaranteed—results vary. Begin with a milder adjustment, check stability, then gradually raise speed and voltages while testing consistently until you reach the maximum limits.
R
Remoow
10-19-2016, 04:24 PM #3

The key issue is beginning your overclock at a high setting and then reducing it, which is counterproductive. A precise overclock isn't guaranteed—results vary. Begin with a milder adjustment, check stability, then gradually raise speed and voltages while testing consistently until you reach the maximum limits.