Will the Asrock z390 phantom gaming sli/ac motherboard be fine to oc the intel i5 9600k to 5Ghz mark???
I have got a 120mm liquid coolerMaybe. It will really depend more on the CPU than the motherboard. But that mobo wont hold you back becuase it is a decent board. But with good cooling and decent silicone, you should hit 5ghz on that board.
Probably not. My 9600K peaks into the mid-70Cs with a Hyper 212 Black Edition, and I'm at stock clocks yet. Most 212 cooler are about the equal of the 120mm AIOs. Give it a try. See how far you get before temps stop you.I have got a 120mm liquid cooler
Will that be enough??
What about the motherboard i am talking about.......will the vrm thing be fine ??Probably not. My 9600K peaks into the mid-70Cs with a Hyper 212 Black Edition, and I'm at stock clocks yet. Most 212 cooler are about the equal of the 120mm AIOs. Give it a try. See how far you get before temps stop you.
With 10 phase power and a hefty heat sink on the mosfets, the VRM should not be your limiting factor for OC'ing the CPU. The cooler would be the first thing that I would expect to limit you. Another item to consider is the quality of your power supply.What about the motherboard i am talking about.......will the vrm thing be fine ??
Its an atx board not an itx boardThat is probably the best VRM available on an ITX z390 board. In fact its probably the best ITX board available for Intel period. Getting to 5ghz is going to depend on your chip. If you won the lottery and only need 1.25v to get there you'll probably be fine. Set your LLC to a point where there is only a slight drop on the VCORE when a %100 load is placed on it. If you can change the switching freq of your VRM turn it as high as you can go. This can help achieve more stable clocks at lower voltage in some cases. If you can upgrade to a bigger AIO it would definitely help.
I got a semi-modular CM 650 watt psu.With 10 phase power and a hefty heat sink on the mosfets, the VRM should not be your limiting factor for OC'ing the CPU. The cooler would be the first thing that I would expect to limit you. Another item to consider is the quality of your power supply.
Its an atx board not an itx board
Which Cooler Master 650 watt exactly?I got a semi-modular CM 650 watt psu.
Yes brother
The 80+ bronze oneI asked which Cooler Master 650W. Was it one of these Cooler Master 650W PSUs?
What psu would u buy or recommend?A 120mm AIO will struggle to keep the 9600k cool. Intel CPUs are very hot. Your PSU is a budget PSU and not one that I would buy or recommend, but it is a lot better than a lot of the junk yard PSUs out on the market.
But I would not worry much about the 5ghz clockspeed. That is just a number. In reality, you wont see any real world difference in 4.8 to 5.0 except in benchmark scores.
Dude i live in India.....seasonic isnt available here and the prices are higher as wellThis Seasonic is a goon one and its also a really good price in the US. You may not need 650 watts though, it really depends on what GPU you are running with your 9600k.
PCPartPicker Part List: https://pcpartpicker.com/list/JPGjxY
Power Supply: SeaSonic - FOCUS Plus Gold 650 W 80+ Gold Certified Fully-Modular ATX Power Supply ($61.98 @ Newegg)
Total: $61.98
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Generated by PCPartPicker 2019-04-29 14:41 EDT-0400