Josh Weston
New member
Can't view the images, dude. Too small. Use a site such as http://imgur.com to upload and embed the images using
I can use this guide for my Z68 and 2600k, or there is something else I need to know?
i watched the video completly so im starting with 1.245v @stock
and make the first step to 1.200 but is 30 min occt really enough to go then again further down ? if 1.200v is stable maybe to 1.170 or so or is it better to let occt running a lot more time wise?
set vcore load line calibration to turbo/extremehi, i hav got to 4.5ghz on my 3770k at 1.130v in the bios but in cpu-z the voltage is 1.160 on load, is this normal?
you can let it go for a longer stabilty trial, but in the sake of time, 30min is
plenty. once you have established the lowest voltage without crashing, BSOD
or windows loading failure, revert to last 30min stability voltage and that would
be your undervolt for stock. then you can do a 24hr stability test to verify
that is the lowest and safest voltage to use. even after 9months you might find
that your temps are higher or your get random crashes. now you know what to
do. decrease the multiplier, increase the voltage or maintanence the cooling
solution.
the idea is for you to find that best case scenario in voltage and multiplier
that offers stability. and instead of big swing numbers, trying the stepped
method gets you familiar to the BIOS, how to react to errors, what to look
for in an overclock. look at how the CPU generates heat with each voltage
increase. once you find you are in the 40+ multiplier, the temperatures start
to increase in larger amounts to the voltage increased. from that you start
to understand the thermal capabilities of how overclocking a CPU holds.
if you find the temps are higher than you like, you have options. fine tune
your overclock, increase the cooling solution, reduce to overclock to a temp
suitable for your environment.
set vcore load line calibration to turbo/extreme
hi, i hav it on extreme?
Try a CMOS reset, pop the battery or short the pins, depending on the method for your motherboard. It will reset EVERYTHING so you'll have to spend a little time reconfiguring stuff like drives, ram etc. possibly.
My guess is that your OC is unstable - but you knew that lol - and the PC cannot even get into the BIOS. Remember, when you are sat in your BIOS your CPU is loaded (a little) and will run at its max clock speed. Sat in the BIOS for extended periods I could see my temps go up, not to gaming levels, but not far off.
Might be something else, but I don't know exactly what you've changed.
Best of luck.
Scoob.
Hello,
I'm having some boot issues after I raiser my multiplier to 48, I think.
Does anybody know a fix for this?
once you recover from the "boot loop" error. you need to re-watch the video.
you are taking way to big of swings to this process. small incrimental steps
are necessary for proper overclocking.
also, if issues do arise, a hardware spec of build would help a whole lot, too..