Man of Honour
- Joined
- 12 Jul 2005
- Posts
- 21,893
- Location
- Aberlour, NE Scotland
Before giving it more vcore (1.3v is already quite a bit for 4.3Ghz) try increasing cpu input voltage to 1.90v. My 4670k won't boot with any less at 4.4Ghz.
Here are my settings for 4.4Ghz core and cache. Get the core stable first before adjusting the cache:-
CPU Core Ratio - Sync all cores
Ratio Limit - 44x (45x for 4.5Ghz)
*Min CPU Cache Ratio - 8x
*Max CPU Cache Ratio - 44x (you may want to leave these until stable and then play around with the cache)
CPU Core Voltage override - 1.275v (1.295v for 4.5Ghz) (use manual voltage until you find the max overclock and then you can work out the offset if you want the voltage to drop at idle).
CPU Cache Voltage - Manual Mode
CPU Cache Voltage Override - 1.300v (leave at stock until clocking the cache)
CPU Input Voltage - 1.90v (4.4Ghz or over and mine won't boot with less)
Annoyingly Gigabyte and Asus call different names for some settings which confuses things. Asus Cache = Gigabyte Uncore is one of them.
Here are my settings for 4.4Ghz core and cache. Get the core stable first before adjusting the cache:-
CPU Core Ratio - Sync all cores
Ratio Limit - 44x (45x for 4.5Ghz)
*Min CPU Cache Ratio - 8x
*Max CPU Cache Ratio - 44x (you may want to leave these until stable and then play around with the cache)
CPU Core Voltage override - 1.275v (1.295v for 4.5Ghz) (use manual voltage until you find the max overclock and then you can work out the offset if you want the voltage to drop at idle).
CPU Cache Voltage - Manual Mode
CPU Cache Voltage Override - 1.300v (leave at stock until clocking the cache)
CPU Input Voltage - 1.90v (4.4Ghz or over and mine won't boot with less)
Annoyingly Gigabyte and Asus call different names for some settings which confuses things. Asus Cache = Gigabyte Uncore is one of them.
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