BIOS reset my OC after booting up windows.

CSKid

Commendable
Jan 2, 2017
25
0
1,540
So I tried overclocking my I5 4400 that was at 3.1Ghz stock to 3.3Ghz not that big difference but meh I saw at Intel official web this cpu was up to 3.3Ghz with Turbo boost but... In BIOS when I change the multiplier to x33 there is a button that toggles the custom clock so i press it, i save everything correcty and I boot windows, the OC reset after the boot, in BIOS and in windows but not the uncore ratio.

I researched about uncore ratio and I saw it should be near the new clock so I changed it to 3.3Ghz, the thing is that the uncore ratio didn't reset but yes the normal OC.

I tried using Intel software "Extreme Tuning Utility" that software let me also change it to 3.3Ghz but when i close the program and i open it again it goes to stock clock speed but in the info tab it says 3.3Ghz but the slide bar is at x31
9671831e48f04767b8fe5696049a8cb7.png
. Also in BIOS i toggles turbo boost, that doesn't reset but does nothing :/.
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I couldn't find this exact same thing in other post just with AMD :D and i don't care if its dangerous i'm getting an I7 soon.

P.S: I didn't modify voltage as Intel says its up to 3.3Ghz without modifications.

I think i messed up with the images :/ sorry my 1st time posting here xD.
Sorry for the bad english but I think u can understand it :)

SPECS:
OS: Windows 10 Pro 64-bit.
CPU: i5 4400 3.1Ghz
GPU: GTX 750 Ti OC to 1233/1310 Clock.
RAM: DDR3 Kingston HyperX KHX1600C10D3/8G 1600Mhz.
Motherboard: Gygabyte GA-H81M-HD3.
Storage: Seagate ST500DM002-1BD142 500GB
 
Solution
Right, now, the CPU doesn't support overclocking since it's not a K-suffixed part. The speed you're seeing is a temporary boost in clock speeds and that too you need to understand that Turbo Boost enables (one or)two processor cores to ramp up to the advertised 3.3GHz. In spite of contemplating an i7 purchase and that too with an i7-6700K you're going to need a Z100/200 series board to allow any form of overclocking.

Lutfij

Titan
Moderator
Right, now, the CPU doesn't support overclocking since it's not a K-suffixed part. The speed you're seeing is a temporary boost in clock speeds and that too you need to understand that Turbo Boost enables (one or)two processor cores to ramp up to the advertised 3.3GHz. In spite of contemplating an i7 purchase and that too with an i7-6700K you're going to need a Z100/200 series board to allow any form of overclocking.
 
Solution

CSKid

Commendable
Jan 2, 2017
25
0
1,540


Kk thanks :D