F5F Stay Refreshed Power Users Overclocking What prevents your overclocked CPU from surpassing the original specifications?

What prevents your overclocked CPU from surpassing the original specifications?

What prevents your overclocked CPU from surpassing the original specifications?

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M
Mod_masta
Member
191
12-10-2016, 05:10 PM
#11
There are no OC abilities available on the A320's motherboard. The maximum turbo frequency of your CPU is 3.4GHz with a base speed of 3.1GHz. Running a single Cinebench test would show 3.4GHz, but doing multiple tests will result in 3.1GHz. This is the standard behavior.

The higher multiplier values are due to different CPU models having varying frequency capabilities. However, unless you adjust them lower, you'll only see the CPU's default performance. You haven't achieved 3.9GHz, just assumed it was possible.

By maintaining stable temperatures and slightly undervolting the CPU via VID, you can achieve better boosts across more cores for extended periods—potentially reaching all four cores, which is why other systems perform so well in Cinebench.

Setting auto voltage at VID allows your CPU to run up to around 1.475 for single threads and about 1.425 for multi-threaded tasks, which accounts for the reduced performance.
M
Mod_masta
12-10-2016, 05:10 PM #11

There are no OC abilities available on the A320's motherboard. The maximum turbo frequency of your CPU is 3.4GHz with a base speed of 3.1GHz. Running a single Cinebench test would show 3.4GHz, but doing multiple tests will result in 3.1GHz. This is the standard behavior.

The higher multiplier values are due to different CPU models having varying frequency capabilities. However, unless you adjust them lower, you'll only see the CPU's default performance. You haven't achieved 3.9GHz, just assumed it was possible.

By maintaining stable temperatures and slightly undervolting the CPU via VID, you can achieve better boosts across more cores for extended periods—potentially reaching all four cores, which is why other systems perform so well in Cinebench.

Setting auto voltage at VID allows your CPU to run up to around 1.475 for single threads and about 1.425 for multi-threaded tasks, which accounts for the reduced performance.

D
Dropsi
Junior Member
5
12-12-2016, 04:08 PM
#12
Voltage is low and temperature is too high. The Ryzen 1000 to 3000 model restricts boost over 70-75°C, and this issue persists even when manually adjusted. Additionally, A320 MBs are not suitable for overclocking and some lack any overclocking features. The best solution is to maintain a cooler environment.
D
Dropsi
12-12-2016, 04:08 PM #12

Voltage is low and temperature is too high. The Ryzen 1000 to 3000 model restricts boost over 70-75°C, and this issue persists even when manually adjusted. Additionally, A320 MBs are not suitable for overclocking and some lack any overclocking features. The best solution is to maintain a cooler environment.

G
GauteZEL
Member
173
12-12-2016, 04:49 PM
#13
got it thank you
G
GauteZEL
12-12-2016, 04:49 PM #13

got it thank you

L
lNa0
Member
239
12-13-2016, 01:49 AM
#14
Do you know if adjusting the voltage helps boost performance, and does it confirm your maximum frequency is 3.4GHz? Also, thank you for the responses.
L
lNa0
12-13-2016, 01:49 AM #14

Do you know if adjusting the voltage helps boost performance, and does it confirm your maximum frequency is 3.4GHz? Also, thank you for the responses.

X
xVeryn1337
Member
229
12-13-2016, 02:28 PM
#15
Yes, your maximum frequency stays at 3.4GHz. You're using a Ryzen processor, not an Intel one. Intel's specifications show different numbers—like 1 core at 3.4GHz, 2x at 3.4, 3x at 3.3, and all 4 at 3.1GHz. That's fixed settings the CPU follows consistently, no matter the voltage or temperature. This isn't what Ryzen does. Your CPU can actually reach and sustain 3.4GHz across all cores when conditions allow. It will adjust its performance within those boundaries. Just keep the environment stable—cool temperatures and good airflow—and it should perform reliably.
X
xVeryn1337
12-13-2016, 02:28 PM #15

Yes, your maximum frequency stays at 3.4GHz. You're using a Ryzen processor, not an Intel one. Intel's specifications show different numbers—like 1 core at 3.4GHz, 2x at 3.4, 3x at 3.3, and all 4 at 3.1GHz. That's fixed settings the CPU follows consistently, no matter the voltage or temperature. This isn't what Ryzen does. Your CPU can actually reach and sustain 3.4GHz across all cores when conditions allow. It will adjust its performance within those boundaries. Just keep the environment stable—cool temperatures and good airflow—and it should perform reliably.

M
MasterHD7
Senior Member
340
12-14-2016, 02:06 PM
#16
Thank you
M
MasterHD7
12-14-2016, 02:06 PM #16

Thank you

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