Cinebench score for Ryzen 5 1600 @ 3.8ghz is lower than score at 3.2ghz

longbui6

Prominent
Feb 11, 2018
2
0
510
I had just built my first PC and tried to overclock for the first time. I followed a guide to overclock my Ryzen 5 1600 to 3.8ghz with voltage of 1.3v offset by +0.0315v and change a couple setting in the Bios . The guide link: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=pBmVf0S4UDs

The computer boot normally and passed the Realbench test at max temp 65C with stock cooler. However, when I tested with Cinebench I recieve a lower score of 906 compare to the score of the cpu run at stock (1141). Please tell me what went wrong and what I have to do?

My system: Ryzen 5 1600
Vengeance DDR4 ram 3000Mhz
Asus B350 F strix motherboard
Samsung 960 m.2
Gigabyte Gtx 1080 G1
EVGA 550W powersupply.

Many thanks!!!
 
Solution
I know people like to skip ahead, but I really recommend for overclocking you start small and test extensively every step of the way. For example, you start with benchmarking at stock 3.2ghz. Then you increase to 3.3ghz and stress test and benchmark there. If everything is fine, move up to 3.4ghz. Do not increase voltages.

At some point you reach the limit of what will work. Now you step back a notch, and increase the voltage slightly as in the smallest amount allowed. Now increase the clockspeed one notch again and test again.

The point is that the final speed and voltage might or might not be the same as other people get. You will need to find what works for you.

eliendrel

Prominent
Feb 16, 2018
33
0
530
only 550w with a ryzen 5 1600 and gtx 1080 I think that's not enough to oc it. Reset your bios settings and download ryzen master to oc it directly with the app it will be easier maybe you didn't oc it well in the bios then oc it to 3.8ghz and the good voltage but from the app if it don't easily beat the stock core then you should use the warranty, but you oced it so it won't work i think. So just try at stock settings and tell us what score you got
 
I know people like to skip ahead, but I really recommend for overclocking you start small and test extensively every step of the way. For example, you start with benchmarking at stock 3.2ghz. Then you increase to 3.3ghz and stress test and benchmark there. If everything is fine, move up to 3.4ghz. Do not increase voltages.

At some point you reach the limit of what will work. Now you step back a notch, and increase the voltage slightly as in the smallest amount allowed. Now increase the clockspeed one notch again and test again.

The point is that the final speed and voltage might or might not be the same as other people get. You will need to find what works for you.
 
Solution