F5F Stay Refreshed Power Users Overclocking Where to proceed from here?

Where to proceed from here?

Where to proceed from here?

O
OKNK
Member
231
03-21-2018, 08:55 AM
#1
Hello everyone. I recently set up a new system with a 2700x and faced serious overheating problems after watching jaystwocents perform a very aggressive forced overclock. I decided to give it a shot and, to my surprise, achieved a solid performance—all cores and RAM running at 3000Mhz with a max of 76 under load! Since I’m still getting comfortable with manual overclocking, I’m wondering where I should start next. I need to conduct stability tests, so what software do you suggest? Any advice would be really helpful. Thanks for your time.
O
OKNK
03-21-2018, 08:55 AM #1

Hello everyone. I recently set up a new system with a 2700x and faced serious overheating problems after watching jaystwocents perform a very aggressive forced overclock. I decided to give it a shot and, to my surprise, achieved a solid performance—all cores and RAM running at 3000Mhz with a max of 76 under load! Since I’m still getting comfortable with manual overclocking, I’m wondering where I should start next. I need to conduct stability tests, so what software do you suggest? Any advice would be really helpful. Thanks for your time.

M
Madmax666
Junior Member
32
03-22-2018, 10:02 PM
#2
Initially, you should opt for a quality aftermarket CPU cooler. Determine the voltage under full load; it's unlikely to remain constant at 1.2v and 4.2GHz. Consult HW Info for accurate readings, temperatures, and other details.
M
Madmax666
03-22-2018, 10:02 PM #2

Initially, you should opt for a quality aftermarket CPU cooler. Determine the voltage under full load; it's unlikely to remain constant at 1.2v and 4.2GHz. Consult HW Info for accurate readings, temperatures, and other details.

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ISY_0815
Senior Member
566
03-23-2018, 12:07 AM
#3
Yeah, I was also a bit puzzled about that. I'm using Ryzen Master to monitor temperatures and voltages, but during Cinebench the voltage stays constant. When I restart into BIOS it shows the voltage is running at 1.4 and it's set to auto. Could Ryzen Master have a problem?
I'm using an AIO cooler and just applied Kryonaut Grizzly paste, which is why I started OC as before—using Arctic Silver and AI Suite for 5-way optimization—but it didn't even reach 8%.
I disabled all the auto settings in BIOS and adjusted the core starting at 40, increasing by one until it crashed. Now all cores are at 4.2 with around 76 under load, RAM OC at 3000 at 1.35, and I just stressed the GPU—it passed. So now I need to run stability checks, correct?
Could you take a look and give me some advice? It seems like there might be an issue with Ryzen here, as it states it's almost at 1.5.
CPU Z
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ISY_0815
03-23-2018, 12:07 AM #3

Yeah, I was also a bit puzzled about that. I'm using Ryzen Master to monitor temperatures and voltages, but during Cinebench the voltage stays constant. When I restart into BIOS it shows the voltage is running at 1.4 and it's set to auto. Could Ryzen Master have a problem?
I'm using an AIO cooler and just applied Kryonaut Grizzly paste, which is why I started OC as before—using Arctic Silver and AI Suite for 5-way optimization—but it didn't even reach 8%.
I disabled all the auto settings in BIOS and adjusted the core starting at 40, increasing by one until it crashed. Now all cores are at 4.2 with around 76 under load, RAM OC at 3000 at 1.35, and I just stressed the GPU—it passed. So now I need to run stability checks, correct?
Could you take a look and give me some advice? It seems like there might be an issue with Ryzen here, as it states it's almost at 1.5.
CPU Z

C
chase2694
Member
127
03-23-2018, 09:26 AM
#4
AI Suite is a straightforward approach, BIOS-based works best. Adjust the multiplier to 42, set voltage to 1.35 and tweak LLC until it stabilizes. If you leave voltage at auto it will likely rise to 1.5v or higher causing excessive heat. Check HW Info, under "CPU Core voltage (SVI12Tpn)" and monitor CPU temperature.
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chase2694
03-23-2018, 09:26 AM #4

AI Suite is a straightforward approach, BIOS-based works best. Adjust the multiplier to 42, set voltage to 1.35 and tweak LLC until it stabilizes. If you leave voltage at auto it will likely rise to 1.5v or higher causing excessive heat. Check HW Info, under "CPU Core voltage (SVI12Tpn)" and monitor CPU temperature.

H
HunterBlazerz
Junior Member
8
03-23-2018, 01:32 PM
#5
Thank you for the suggestion to give it a try right away
H
HunterBlazerz
03-23-2018, 01:32 PM #5

Thank you for the suggestion to give it a try right away