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Oveclocking issues.

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V!P3R
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2020/04/27 10:11:06 (permalink)
OS Name    Microsoft Windows 10 Home
Version    10.0.18362 Build 18362
Other OS Description     Not Available
OS Manufacturer    Microsoft Corporation
System Name    OVPC-1979
System Manufacturer    EVGA INTERNATIONAL CO.,LTD
System Model    134-KS-E379
System Type    x64-based PC
System SKU    Default string
Processor    Intel(R) Core(TM) i7-9700K CPU @ 3.60GHz, 3601 Mhz, 8 Core(s), 8 Logical Processor(s)
BIOS Version/Date    American Megatrends Inc. 1.14, 4/3/2019
SMBIOS Version    3.0
Embedded Controller Version    255.255
BIOS Mode    UEFI
BaseBoard Manufacturer    EVGA INTERNATIONAL CO.,LTD
BaseBoard Product    134-KS-E379
BaseBoard Version    1.0
Platform Role    Desktop
Secure Boot State    Off
PCR7 Configuration    Elevation Required to View
Locale    United States
Hardware Abstraction Layer    Version = "10.0.18362.752"
Time Zone    Eastern Daylight Time
Installed Physical Memory (RAM)    32.0 GB
Total Physical Memory    31.9 GB




Upgraded my BIOS and Chip and am currently overclocking the 9700k to 5g on auto constantly crashed the computer to the point I must push the CMOS. I have experience in OCing, but I was wondering if you all had tips. Right now it is stable at 4.8g on auto volt. I have tried manual voltage 1.2-1.4 to no avail.  All boot, then crash. I put it on auto, then I can boot. Stress it with CPU-Z, crash..Auto=no crash. I have heard that EVGA boards are fickle when it comes to OCing, so I would love some solid advice. Thank you.
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    coolmistry
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    Re: Oveclocking issues. 2020/04/27 11:41:45 (permalink)
     Your CPU Core i7-9700K doesn't use as much power as the Core i9-9900K. It even draws less power overclocked than a stock Core i9-9900K in both non-AVX and AVX stress tests. Bear in mind that the overclocked Core i7-9700K and i9-9900K CPUs employ AVX offsets that step down to 4.8 GHz during our Prime95 stress test.
    Stable will be 4.8 maybe can reach 4.9 depend on your motherboard and RAMS
    Have a look here > Intel Core i7-9700K 9th Gen CPU Review: Eight Cores And No Hyper-Threading

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    Sajin
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    Re: Oveclocking issues. 2020/04/27 19:56:23 (permalink)
    How much voltage on auto is 4.8 GHz using when stress tested?
     
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    bob16314
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    Re: Oveclocking issues. 2020/04/27 23:09:19 (permalink)
    You can run HWiNFO (Sensors-only) which will track the Cur/Min/Max/Avg Vcore..See what it is under load when on Auto..Use something like the Intel Processor Diagnostic Tool or IntelBurnTest to load up your CPU real good..Then use Vcore "Override" in the BIOS for that same Max Vcore and see how it rolls..Careful with the Vdroop because that can increase your Vcore under load BIG time.
     
    You can use the Intel Extreme Tuning Utility for making Adaptive or Static Vcore and some other changes dynamically without going into the BIOS every time to make static changes.

    There's also the Intel Performance Maximizer tool you can run for a 'dummy' overclock and see what you get.

    This guide is for Z390 DARK info/overclocking but will give you some really good info/tips on settings that are identical/nearly identical to your Z370 Classified K.

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