Is this considered a stable overclock?

Evil Joker

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Apr 13, 2014
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Hi guys! I made my first overclock current specs
I5 4670k@4.2
Vcore 1.14
Hyper 212 evo
Z97X SLI
16Gb Hyperx fury (2x8) (default speed is 1866 but running them at 1333Mhz)
Integrated gpu (my 970 is RMA)

So I've running 20 times IBT at very high with a max temp of 72C
And occt for 4 houra and the max temp is 62C
 
Solution
seems pretty good, do a bunch of x264 loops and do some gaming. the important thing to remember about unstable overclock is what it can potentially do to your stored data via data coruption. so I always like to recommend backing up all important files if you're going to do a ton of trial and error overclocking.
seems pretty good, do a bunch of x264 loops and do some gaming. the important thing to remember about unstable overclock is what it can potentially do to your stored data via data coruption. so I always like to recommend backing up all important files if you're going to do a ton of trial and error overclocking.
 
Solution


Thank you! A couple more questions. iBT and OCT temps are very different. What's the max temp on IBT and OCCT. I tried 1.22 and 10 runs on IBT but the max temp was 84. And on OCCT it's 73C.

It's 4.4Ghz and stable. Vin is 1.95V. CpuV 1.22. What do you think?
 
the input voltage is a little high for that vcore, usually .6 above vcore is plenty, depending on the motherboard. have you tried lowering it while leaving everything else the same?

IBT stresses the chip a bit more for unnessesary reason in my opinion

i like Asus Realbench with the x264 or you can run x264v2 by its self and occt. I find the occt gives errors the quickest out of the 3.
 


Could you help me with this one? http://www.tomshardware.com/answers/id-2957263/4670k-5ghz.html