M mrsandbox123 Honorable Jul 5, 2013 39 0 10,530 Sep 13, 2013 #1 Im overclocking soon on my ASUS Z87-K motherboard and I dont know what to set the voltage too, im also using the Corsair H80i
Im overclocking soon on my ASUS Z87-K motherboard and I dont know what to set the voltage too, im also using the Corsair H80i
Solution E E egilbe Sep 13, 2013 mrsandbox123 : egilbe : You don't touch the voltage until you find its unstable, then you bump it up a tiny notch. Every computer and component overclocks differently. ohhh, then should I keep it as the stock voltage then if its unstable boost it? yes, and the increase is in hundredths of a volt, too. don't go blasting it with 1 volt increases, you'll fry it.
mrsandbox123 : egilbe : You don't touch the voltage until you find its unstable, then you bump it up a tiny notch. Every computer and component overclocks differently. ohhh, then should I keep it as the stock voltage then if its unstable boost it? yes, and the increase is in hundredths of a volt, too. don't go blasting it with 1 volt increases, you'll fry it.
E egilbe Distinguished Nov 17, 2011 1,417 0 19,460 Sep 13, 2013 #2 You don't touch the voltage until you find its unstable, then you bump it up a tiny notch. Every computer and component overclocks differently. Upvote 0 Downvote
You don't touch the voltage until you find its unstable, then you bump it up a tiny notch. Every computer and component overclocks differently.
M mrsandbox123 Honorable Jul 5, 2013 39 0 10,530 Sep 13, 2013 #3 egilbe : You don't touch the voltage until you find its unstable, then you bump it up a tiny notch. Every computer and component overclocks differently. ohhh, then should I keep it as the stock voltage then if its unstable boost it? Upvote 0 Downvote
egilbe : You don't touch the voltage until you find its unstable, then you bump it up a tiny notch. Every computer and component overclocks differently. ohhh, then should I keep it as the stock voltage then if its unstable boost it?
E egilbe Distinguished Nov 17, 2011 1,417 0 19,460 Sep 13, 2013 Solution #4 mrsandbox123 : egilbe : You don't touch the voltage until you find its unstable, then you bump it up a tiny notch. Every computer and component overclocks differently. ohhh, then should I keep it as the stock voltage then if its unstable boost it? yes, and the increase is in hundredths of a volt, too. don't go blasting it with 1 volt increases, you'll fry it. Upvote 0 Downvote Solution
mrsandbox123 : egilbe : You don't touch the voltage until you find its unstable, then you bump it up a tiny notch. Every computer and component overclocks differently. ohhh, then should I keep it as the stock voltage then if its unstable boost it? yes, and the increase is in hundredths of a volt, too. don't go blasting it with 1 volt increases, you'll fry it.
Tradesman1 Legenda in Aeternum Jun 5, 2013 67,883 40 126,960 Sep 13, 2013 #5 Many hit 4.0 by simply increasing tohe multiplier, above that varies. just take things up in slow increases and document as you go for fallback Upvote 0 Downvote
Many hit 4.0 by simply increasing tohe multiplier, above that varies. just take things up in slow increases and document as you go for fallback