Yeah each company has their own bios, but even a bios from the same company can be different depending on the motherboard. It can get pretty confusing.
No!! The SoC should NOT go over 1.1v in your hardware monitoring software. So it's something you need to then check. Because each motherboard does different things. I typically set my SOC as a fixed number not doing offsets.
How I set it to just boost to that it just stays at the multiplier I set I'd rather it boost to 4.0ghz instead of staying there all the time if possible
There is undervolting where you leave the multiplier at auto and Lower the voltage to hopefully drop the temperature of the CPU. ru-vid.com/video/%D0%B2%D0%B8%D0%B4%D0%B5%D0%BE-qEO4EyVXZHs.html How if you set a multiplier the multiplier won't change, but the effective clock speed won't run at "full speed" all the time. Meaning the power output at idle won't be as high as under load.
I overclocked a Ryzen 5 3600 to 4.1ghz and 1.25volts on Ryzen Master. I can't undervolt on BIOS using Dynamic Vcore Voltage. When I set -.006 voltage in HwInfo peaks at 1.09volts then crashes haha. Tried -.002, voltages still won't come to 1.25volts Motherboard Gigabyte B450 Aorus M.
@@HardwareForGamers just bought that cpu few days back and it boost to 4.1 depends on the task, so im thinking should i overclock it for a casual gamer, then again in my room is like 15°c and its a open case with out of the box ryzen cooler
hello I have a question, my bios does not appear opcache ?? What do I do since it is the same bios as yours and it is updated and since opcache does not appear I can not configure the voltages
i did an over clock for my cpu also like yours but in 4.2 hz , and everything looks good , only something i wanna ask is : look at the temperature of the cpu when you don't do anything , it looks not stable like , 47 - 42 - 49 - 40 even in the video before you force it , that happens to me too , and i wanna ask you if is it normal , thank you so much for your videos its really useful .
The overclock will depend on the CPU and what generation the CPU is. Because there's no way you should be able to get a 4.2 GHz stable overclock on a gen 1 ryzen CPU when using 1.4v or less. And regarding the temperature, if you just leave the computer idle for 4 to 5 minutes the temperature will settle. Now if you're talking about the temperatures before you overclock auto voltages can be a little weird letting Windows and the motherboard control things (leaving it on auto) is typically not a good idea, it can cause weird temperature spikes.
@@HardwareForGamers i mean i have ryzen 3100 in stuck 3.6 temperature is very stable like , when you don't do anything it doesn't change from 40 . but when when i did the overclock i check temperature i find it like not stable . in 1 sec it can change from 40 to 47 for no reason and without running programs or forcing the cpu . i keeps changing from 40-49-45-43-40 after it goes down again to 40 . then after 10 sec it moves from 40 to 49 for 0 reason and i saw that also in your video i just wanna know if is that not a problem or danger to the cpu . i can't explain very good and sorry for my bad english
@@HardwareForGamers look in your video at 7:52 and watch , the temperature were 40 and in 1 second its changed to 48 , thats what i'm talking about for my cpu 3100 overclocked from 3.6 to 4.2 without running anything , just checking the temperature it changes like that idk if is it normal , or a problem
@@HichamHicham-ji3zj just because you're not doing something on the system, doesn't mean that the system isn't doing something. Open task manager, Windows is always doing something, now if you let the system idle for 4 or 5 minutes and it's still happening, there might be an issue with the thermal paste that's on the CPU or the CPU cooler may not be sufficient or a very good cooler.
@@HardwareForGamers Oh , but i don't have that problem in stuck speed .it means the problems comes when i only do the overclock ...... and in your video at 7:52 also having that changes but you didn't say anything about it , so i can take it as a normal thing happens or what :( . alright , should i keep on that overclock and let this problem runs with the cpu or i make back the stuck speed and leave it for safety .
i got b450m ds3h and ryzen 5 3400g when i go to advanced voltage settings the only thing i can see is DRAM VOLTAGE (CH A/B) and i need cpu vcor , any solution to find it please ???
That's not how you setup a voltage offset, you have to set a negative offset so the CPU doesn't go to 1.5-6V and just degrade itself till death, a negative voltage of -0.100 would be a good place to start with, if your computer crashes with that voltage bring it up a little bit, like -0.0875, and always do small increments, and test each thing before changing another, also, you want to set up your LLC too, that way you can control how the voltage regulates between loads, very useful for overclocking, mostly try to keep LLC at the middle/medium range, for example, if you have 5 levels of LLC you would want to use either level 3 or 2, depending on your motherboard. With this config since your idle voltage would be around 1.4 or so, and your load voltage would be around 1.3, which is good for Ryzen 1xx and 2xx, although I would recommend not doing offsets if possible, just try to set your voltages between 1.280-1.350 and you're good to go. I'm currently running a Ryzen 5 1600 at 4GHz with a set voltage of 1.3125 not an offset, and level 3 LLC, and ram at 3200MHz CL14 (will try to get 3533Mhz in the future) Remember LLC differs between motherboard vendors, I own an Asrock B450M Steel Series motherboard and level 5 is the lowest while level 1 is the highest, I used to own an MSI X470 Gaming Pro that got water damaged and it had like 10 levels of LLC, level 1 being the lowest and 10 the highest.
@@HardwareForGamers Yeah, sorry, just checked and for Gigabyte boards what you did it's fine, but next time clarify that it's not the same for every board, because, offsets for mine are not like yours, which goes for Asrock, Asus and MSI boards, Gigabyte boards don't seem to allow negative offsets, on any other board you would be pushing 1.5 volts into the chip with a positive offset.
You make no sense, not all hardware is the same, you make it seem like you just now found out how to somewhat overclock and think what you do is the right way
Please provide a tutorial for overclocking ryzen 5 3600 4.2ghz which is safe to use every day playing games and editing videos, please make the tutorial because I am looking for a tutorial I haven't found the right one like yours which is very easy to understand by beginners like me ?? 🥺
@@gus.bro17 if your looking to OC your system check out this it should help How To Overclock And Undervolt A CPU and GPU - ru-vid.com/video/%D0%B2%D0%B8%D0%B4%D0%B5%D0%BE-jpRwtMzZ9aQ.html
Did the exact same thing as you did but put 4.2ghz , ryzen 5 3600 , gigabyte b450m ds3h getting black screen everytime and all drivers seems up to date , computer restart fan and everything running keyboard is lightening when i press a key but has nothing on screen
@@acanthopterygii what are you using to monitor the temperature and voltage? It sounds like you want to undervolt, I haven't undervolted an Intel CPU in... A long time. You should run some benchmarks before starting. I would recommend voltage offset, but you'll need to use a - offset.
bro i have a question i also have ryzen 5 1500x why does my vcore not drop during idle!! my freq drops but not vcore why? i have c states enabled... help??
Make sure your voltage is set adaptive and not to a fixed voltage in BIOS, and in Windows be sure you're on the "balanced" power plan, and not the "Ryzen balanced" plan. sounds counter-intuitive, but that Ryzen balanced plan was a stopgap fix that stuck around and isn't good for anything now.
Hello can you help me? My CPU vdd not changed when a test in cinebench on BIOS i háve changed manual but on hw monitor CPU vdd is 1088 and not 1,237 or 1,3 etc
I have the r5 3400g I overclocked it to 4.1ghz on auto voltage the motherboard set the voltage to 1.45v that made the cpu temperatures so high So if I what to keep it at 4.1ghz what voltage should I set it on manually
@@HardwareForGamers ok so when dynamic v core at auto then it seems fine but when iam tuning it manually bios showing voltages 1.5 volts on ideal is this even possible I have ryzen 3 2200g
I have a ryzen 7 1800x that I want to overclock, but I don't want to put the voltage at it's max, what voltage do you recommend I stick to prevent overheating and overvolting the chip?
@@HardwareForGamers Hi! I have a gigabyte B450M-DS3H motherboard, and I have an AIO corsair single fan cooler. What are some good temperatures for daily driving (under idle, and under load) that won't affect the CPU lifespan?
@@linghampanch7709 I'd be more worried about that motherboard than the CPU. The vrm's of that motherboard are not good. Just go through the steps I show in the video and stay under 1.4v then tell me what you get.
@@HardwareForGamers will do, I'm extremely nervous in fear of breaking something. My voltage is 1.286 on default so I'll work up from there. What is the best way to do it? Overclcok to my frequency at put voltage to 1.4 and bring it down until is unstable? Or vice-versa bring up the voltage up to 1.4 where it's stable?
@@linghampanch7709 I prefer to work my way up, but all and all it doesn't normally matter (if you have a good enough CPU cooler) with your CPU and motherboard combination you will need to also keep an eye on the VRM temps too (try to keep the VRM's under 85C)
Hi, did you ever hear that we could adjust or fixed Vcore to solve "kernel power 41" error (in win 10)? Could you give me some advice to solve that error? Thanks! :)
My understanding is that kernel power 41 is more of a Window's thing, meaning the issue is with the power settings in Windows. So I don't think adjusting the Vcore will help. Now I did read that updating the BIOS could fix the issue, but I've never had this issue so I'm not too much help sorry.
@@HardwareForGamers hi, i've just found "kernel power 41 error" caused by power supply. I replaced another PSU and this error never happen for month. In windows, i choose default power settings.
What's the purpose of the offset? I've been playing around with my 7600 I can get like 5.5ghz at 1.26v manual with a negative offset of 0.1v however it seems to just lock the system too 1.16v resulting in a crash when under a CPU stability test. If I do the other way around like 1.15v with a 0.11v positive offset it just forces max voltage of 1.26v until its under load in which case voltage just drops by 0.02v Really I'm trying to learn I thought this might kinda be like curve optimize but I don't understand the purpose of a manual voltage, along with an offset vs just manual voltage alone as the voltage doesn't really do anything but peak at max? Under ideal scenarios will the voltage move up and down based on the offset? Or is it really just another way to force a voltage besides manual voltage alone, sorry if I'm not wording this well it just seems like manual voltage of 1.2v and a positive offset of 0.05v is the same 1.25v as manual 1.25v alone.
If you're setting a frequency, then yes there's not much of a difference between the offset of +.05v and setting the voltage to 1.25v. It really depends on the motherboard. plus some cheap motherboards only work using offsets. now since Ryzen 3000 series it's not typical to set a frequency because Precision Boost Overdrive (PBO) does a pretty good job boosting the CPU for everyday workloads. Its become far more typical to undervolt the CPU and use PBO, so leaving the frequency on auto and using a negative Vcore offset . Maxing out PBO is not quite that simple, but I'm sure there's plenty of videos on RU-vid that would help.
Sorry, but are you asking a question? If your system is crashing at 1.2 volts what do you have the frequency set to? And if you're asking how to reset your bios you'll have to refer to your motherboard's manual.
Both most likely. Overclocking refers to increasing the frequency. Depending on the CPU it is possible to increase the frequency while lowering the voltage.
Very nice vid. Please help! I have a Ryzen 5 3400g and my goal is to run it at 4.00Ghz with 1.35 ~ 1.37 voltage but it keeps on crashing. I've read some posts that they can run theirs at even lower voltage (1.3V) at 4Ghz. But mine can't. What to do?
the main reasons why a CPU would crash, are temperatures or not enough voltage. What is the temperatures of the CPU? What cooler are you using? Are you using the integrated graphics of your APU?
@@HardwareForGamers My temp at idle is 35C. Under load/gaming 60-70 dpends on the game. So am I undervoltage? Why others can run theirs even at 1.35 volts at 4Ghz? Mine can't even at 1.37 volts.
@@cDekKk 70c when gaming is definitely on the higher side. It really comes down to silicon lottery when overclock. So if it is the silicon your shit out of luck.
I got mine to 4.2 ghz at +0.024v and my vega 11 graphics at 1800mhz with no voltage change,getting around 40-50 when gaming. I am using a cooler master ml rgb v2 water-cooler though.
@@HardwareForGamers I'm really sorry if I'm wrong, but you really look very confused with whatever you're saying! So, the trust factor is really necessary in order to apply your instructions on my pc.