F5F Stay Refreshed Power Users Overclocking Windows stops working after increasing the speed settings.

Windows stops working after increasing the speed settings.

Windows stops working after increasing the speed settings.

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BBaseball_MC
Junior Member
13
02-08-2016, 11:50 AM
#1
Following the overclocking of both my CPU and GPU, my PC experiences crashes in certain games. After playing a game for some time, the system becomes unstable, resolution degrades, and the 😖 face appears. I used AI Suite III for overclocking the CPU and EVGA for the GPU. After adjusting the settings, I returned to default, but I’m puzzled because the core clock is higher than both the base and boost clocks. My hardware is a GTX 1080 and i7 6700K.
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BBaseball_MC
02-08-2016, 11:50 AM #1

Following the overclocking of both my CPU and GPU, my PC experiences crashes in certain games. After playing a game for some time, the system becomes unstable, resolution degrades, and the 😖 face appears. I used AI Suite III for overclocking the CPU and EVGA for the GPU. After adjusting the settings, I returned to default, but I’m puzzled because the core clock is higher than both the base and boost clocks. My hardware is a GTX 1080 and i7 6700K.

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Zacherino5900
Member
120
02-08-2016, 04:52 PM
#2
Jesper Heidenberg Hansen shares his experience using AI Suite III for the CPU and EVGA Precision X for the GPU, with a GTX 1080 and an i7 6700k. He mentions removing the overclock on the GPU but now feels uncertain. He emphasizes the importance of having all components—CPU, GPU, motherboard, power supply, and cooler—and warns against using automatic overclock tools, calling them unreliable. He suggests reading guides but notes they take a lot of time.
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Zacherino5900
02-08-2016, 04:52 PM #2

Jesper Heidenberg Hansen shares his experience using AI Suite III for the CPU and EVGA Precision X for the GPU, with a GTX 1080 and an i7 6700k. He mentions removing the overclock on the GPU but now feels uncertain. He emphasizes the importance of having all components—CPU, GPU, motherboard, power supply, and cooler—and warns against using automatic overclock tools, calling them unreliable. He suggests reading guides but notes they take a lot of time.

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nightfall8000
Member
141
02-08-2016, 06:52 PM
#3
On the GPU, you have the option to raise the power and temperature limits. For the CPU, you can attempt to boost the voltage.
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nightfall8000
02-08-2016, 06:52 PM #3

On the GPU, you have the option to raise the power and temperature limits. For the CPU, you can attempt to boost the voltage.

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zlouwolk
Junior Member
3
02-09-2016, 05:58 PM
#4
If turbo boost is functioning, you might be doing it incorrectly. If your system is failing, your overclocking isn't stable. Lower the settings and begin again.

What hardware are you employing, precisely? And secondly, did you simply increase it or are you following a manual and testing gradually?
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zlouwolk
02-09-2016, 05:58 PM #4

If turbo boost is functioning, you might be doing it incorrectly. If your system is failing, your overclocking isn't stable. Lower the settings and begin again.

What hardware are you employing, precisely? And secondly, did you simply increase it or are you following a manual and testing gradually?

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Unreckable
Member
59
02-11-2016, 05:25 PM
#5
No overclocking on the shotgun! Just make one change at a time, test for stability, verify it works in real conditions, and then proceed to the next adjustment.
Restore everything to its default setting, ensure your GPU is set to its original configuration.
Only adjust the GPU settings directly within Windows; any other changes should come from the BIOS.
First, check and install the RAM, confirming everything boots properly.
Next, fine-tune the CPU by adjusting the multiplier and clock speed until you encounter boot failures at a comfortable voltage, then gradually reduce it. Perform thorough testing to ensure stability.
Finally, incrementally boost the GPU settings, but only if you notice graphical problems.
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Unreckable
02-11-2016, 05:25 PM #5

No overclocking on the shotgun! Just make one change at a time, test for stability, verify it works in real conditions, and then proceed to the next adjustment.
Restore everything to its default setting, ensure your GPU is set to its original configuration.
Only adjust the GPU settings directly within Windows; any other changes should come from the BIOS.
First, check and install the RAM, confirming everything boots properly.
Next, fine-tune the CPU by adjusting the multiplier and clock speed until you encounter boot failures at a comfortable voltage, then gradually reduce it. Perform thorough testing to ensure stability.
Finally, incrementally boost the GPU settings, but only if you notice graphical problems.

K
KilledBy_Alex
Member
61
02-11-2016, 08:55 PM
#6
In the tests the clock speed surpasses both the displayed value and the boost clock. Is this typical?
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KilledBy_Alex
02-11-2016, 08:55 PM #6

In the tests the clock speed surpasses both the displayed value and the boost clock. Is this typical?

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Tbouss
Junior Member
15
02-13-2016, 04:48 PM
#7
Jesper Heidenberg Hansen:
In the benchmarks, the clock speed is higher than the one displayed here as well as the boost clock. Is this typical?
That link isn't functioning, but I pasted it here and it doesn't provide any useful information.
What hardware are you using?
What technique are you applying to overclock?
Without those two details, no one can assist you.
T
Tbouss
02-13-2016, 04:48 PM #7

Jesper Heidenberg Hansen:
In the benchmarks, the clock speed is higher than the one displayed here as well as the boost clock. Is this typical?
That link isn't functioning, but I pasted it here and it doesn't provide any useful information.
What hardware are you using?
What technique are you applying to overclock?
Without those two details, no one can assist you.

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Night__Man
Member
144
02-18-2016, 08:56 AM
#8
My CPU uses AI Suite III automatic, and for the GPU I'm using EVGA Precision X. It's a GTX 1080 with an i7 6700k. I stopped overclocking the GPU, but I'm not sure what happened.
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Night__Man
02-18-2016, 08:56 AM #8

My CPU uses AI Suite III automatic, and for the GPU I'm using EVGA Precision X. It's a GTX 1080 with an i7 6700k. I stopped overclocking the GPU, but I'm not sure what happened.

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koni1222
Junior Member
6
02-20-2016, 12:25 PM
#9
Jesper Heidenberg Hansen shares his experience using AI Suite III for the CPU and EVGA Precision X for the GPU, with a GTX 1080 and an i7 6700k. He mentions removing the overclock on the GPU but now feels uncertain. He emphasizes the importance of having all components—CPU, GPU, motherboard, power supply, and cooler—and warns against using automatic overclock tools, calling them unreliable. He suggests reading guides but notes they take a lot of time.
K
koni1222
02-20-2016, 12:25 PM #9

Jesper Heidenberg Hansen shares his experience using AI Suite III for the CPU and EVGA Precision X for the GPU, with a GTX 1080 and an i7 6700k. He mentions removing the overclock on the GPU but now feels uncertain. He emphasizes the importance of having all components—CPU, GPU, motherboard, power supply, and cooler—and warns against using automatic overclock tools, calling them unreliable. He suggests reading guides but notes they take a lot of time.