5/20/2023 0 Comments Msi afterburner cpu overclockRIG#2 CPU: Intel i9 11900k | Motherboard: Z590 AORUS Master | RAM: Corsair Vengeance RGB Pro 32GB DDR4 3600 | GPU: EVGA FTW3 ULTRA RTX 3090 ti | PSU: EVGA 1300 G+ | Case: Lian Li O11 Dynamic EVO | Cooler: Noctua NH-D15 | SSD#1: SSD#1: Corsair MP600 1TB | SSD#2: Crucial MX300 2.5" 1TB | Monitor: LG 55" 4k C1 OLED TV RIG#1 CPU: AMD, R 7 5800x3D| Motherboard: X570 AORUS Master | RAM: Corsair Vengeance RGB Pro 32GB DDR4 3200 | GPU: EVGA FTW3 ULTRA RTX 3090 ti | PSU: EVGA 1000 G+ | Case: Lian Li O11 Dynamic | Cooler: EK 360mm AIO | SSD#1: Corsair MP600 1TB | SSD#2: Crucial MX500 2.5" 2TB | Monitor: ASUS ROG Swift PG42UQ If games don’t crash and stress tests don’t crash then it is successfully stable. Raise core voltage up one notch and stress test for 15 mins and run some games. Run another stress test for 15 mins to validate results and start turning down core voltage by 10 until instability. Once you get that to max ( running 2 minute stress test every 100 plus. Once you get to a max good stability, start raising memory clock by plus 100. Then start raising core clock by 40 and stress testing for 2 minutes. Start by raising core voltage to the max and power limit and temp limit all the way up. You can do auto overclock but I would say just manually overclock. once that percentage starts to drop, I would stop just run "test") at the end of each test, afterburner will give a percentage. every time you raise it, run a built in stress test (same button. then, manually start cranking your memory clock slowly. then click "scan" it will auto overclock your core clock.
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |