F5F Stay Refreshed Power Users Overclocking What is Ring/LLC Clock?

What is Ring/LLC Clock?

What is Ring/LLC Clock?

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Arckil
Junior Member
7
10-18-2016, 12:02 AM
#1
Hi! Your overclocking seems to be working as expected based on the information from HWInfo. The numbers you see match what you should expect after successfully reaching 4.6GHz. The differences you noticed might be due to how the BIOS or system reports it. Let me know if you need more details!
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Arckil
10-18-2016, 12:02 AM #1

Hi! Your overclocking seems to be working as expected based on the information from HWInfo. The numbers you see match what you should expect after successfully reaching 4.6GHz. The differences you noticed might be due to how the BIOS or system reports it. Let me know if you need more details!

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Mini_Muffin24
Member
179
10-19-2016, 07:50 AM
#2
The ring ratio refers to the connection between cores, cache, memory controllers, etc., while the uncore ratio relates to the cache/memory clock speed. It's ideal to maintain a 1:1 clock ratio among all components, though having slightly lower ratios for ring and uncore is acceptable as it helps the core clock operate without instability.
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Mini_Muffin24
10-19-2016, 07:50 AM #2

The ring ratio refers to the connection between cores, cache, memory controllers, etc., while the uncore ratio relates to the cache/memory clock speed. It's ideal to maintain a 1:1 clock ratio among all components, though having slightly lower ratios for ring and uncore is acceptable as it helps the core clock operate without instability.

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EdenMarie
Member
190
10-20-2016, 01:35 AM
#3
Ring/LLC is the CPU's cache memory clock. You can try to overclock it, but it might lead to instability. I believe you should ensure it stays within 500MHz or lower than the core clock speed.
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EdenMarie
10-20-2016, 01:35 AM #3

Ring/LLC is the CPU's cache memory clock. You can try to overclock it, but it might lead to instability. I believe you should ensure it stays within 500MHz or lower than the core clock speed.

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ImEternity
Junior Member
45
10-21-2016, 07:45 AM
#4
I meant when I open bios, not the motherboard. Sorry! Your ring is at a good MHz because it's 500MHz or less compared to the core clock speed. Also, can you clarify what an uncore ratio is? My uncore ratio is 41x, which matters for overclocking—should I keep it like this or change it?
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ImEternity
10-21-2016, 07:45 AM #4

I meant when I open bios, not the motherboard. Sorry! Your ring is at a good MHz because it's 500MHz or less compared to the core clock speed. Also, can you clarify what an uncore ratio is? My uncore ratio is 41x, which matters for overclocking—should I keep it like this or change it?

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shu0519
Junior Member
11
11-08-2016, 10:51 AM
#5
The ring ratio refers to the connection between cores, cache, memory controllers, etc., while the uncore ratio relates to the cache/memory clock speed. It's ideal to maintain a 1:1 clock ratio among all components, though having slightly lower ratios for ring and uncore is acceptable as it helps the core clock operate without instability.
S
shu0519
11-08-2016, 10:51 AM #5

The ring ratio refers to the connection between cores, cache, memory controllers, etc., while the uncore ratio relates to the cache/memory clock speed. It's ideal to maintain a 1:1 clock ratio among all components, though having slightly lower ratios for ring and uncore is acceptable as it helps the core clock operate without instability.

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fishy37
Member
131
11-11-2016, 11:22 PM
#6
Are you sure everything is okay and you don’t need any adjustments?
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fishy37
11-11-2016, 11:22 PM #6

Are you sure everything is okay and you don’t need any adjustments?

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eruraion
Member
118
11-15-2016, 06:26 PM
#7
It looks good overall. You might also try using CPU-Z to check the CPU clock speed; it's quite dependable.
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eruraion
11-15-2016, 06:26 PM #7

It looks good overall. You might also try using CPU-Z to check the CPU clock speed; it's quite dependable.

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MrScooter2
Member
198
11-16-2016, 12:49 AM
#8
In short, if your CPU clears the Prime95 24-hour test (currently at 14 hours) along with a few other checks, you should be able to fully benefit from your 4.6GHz overclock despite the 41x uncore ratio.
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MrScooter2
11-16-2016, 12:49 AM #8

In short, if your CPU clears the Prime95 24-hour test (currently at 14 hours) along with a few other checks, you should be able to fully benefit from your 4.6GHz overclock despite the 41x uncore ratio.

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oshkosh1346
Junior Member
21
11-17-2016, 11:47 PM
#9
Yes. I personally don't see the point in 24hr testing on a gaming system. It's unnecessary wear and tear IMO. 1hr is usually good enough for me and my system. If my games are that important that I needed 100% certainty that my system didn't crash, I wouldn't be overclocking.
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oshkosh1346
11-17-2016, 11:47 PM #9

Yes. I personally don't see the point in 24hr testing on a gaming system. It's unnecessary wear and tear IMO. 1hr is usually good enough for me and my system. If my games are that important that I needed 100% certainty that my system didn't crash, I wouldn't be overclocking.