• Competitor rules

    Please remember that any mention of competitors, hinting at competitors or offering to provide details of competitors will result in an account suspension. The full rules can be found under the 'Terms and Rules' link in the bottom right corner of your screen. Just don't mention competitors in any way, shape or form and you'll be OK.

AMD confirms Ryzen 7 5800X3D launches this spring, Zen4 Raphael in 2H 2022

https://wccftech.com/amd-ryzen-7-58...d-3d-v-cache-chip-spotted-running-at-4-8-ghz/

The overclocker shared a pictured of CPU-z in which the Ryzen 7 5800X3D can be seen with an operating frequency of 4.82 GHz, far above its 4.5 GHz max boost clock. The chip was running on the ASUS ROG Crosshair VIII Extreme motherboard with a 1.306V voltage and a 45.5 multiplier and a BCLK of 105.99 MHz. The overclocker did use ASUS's Voltage Suspension technology to make it work & will have a video out explaining the whole process soon.

Would be interesting to see if it's worth the faff.
 
No Ryzens are locked

I thought I read that the 5800X3D was locked from overclocking in anyway due to the voltage restrictions. So multiplier and PBO2 curve optimiser locked out on bios.

But you're saying now that this cpu can be overclocked by increasing the mutiplier to say 47 and running the max voltage which is 1.35 on this cpu?
 
I thought I read that the 5800X3D was locked from overclocking in anyway due to the voltage restrictions. So multiplier and PBO2 curve optimiser locked out on bios.

But you're saying now that this cpu can be overclocked by increasing the mutiplier to say 47 and running the max voltage which is 1.35 on this cpu?

Look at the asus voltage tool ; there will be a way found to do it within spec.
 
I'm beginning to wonder if the real reason AMD are locking these to 4.5Ghz is so not to eat too much in to Zen 4 gaming performance.

"Overclocking will damage them" yeah right....

It's not the clocks that's the problem it's the voltage, why amd disabled clocks in bios I don't know because only voltage matters - they should lock voltage in the bios, disable PBO and curve optimizer but let people let fixed clocks if they wishb

This software is confusing the system to run higher clocks but the guy was very careful not to exceed the safe voltage limit otherwise the chip go pop?
 
It's not the clocks that's the problem it's the voltage, why amd disabled clocks in bios I don't know because only voltage matters - they should lock voltage in the bios, disable PBO and curve optimizer but let people let fixed clocks if they wishb

Yeah that's what I think too.

PBO won't work as it needs more than 1.35 volts to hit the usual boost clocks, but that's more than enough voltage for a decent all core overclock. A good chip could get 4.7ghz allcore easily.
 
It's not the clocks that's the problem it's the voltage, why amd disabled clocks in bios I don't know because only voltage matters - they should lock voltage in the bios, disable PBO and curve optimizer but let people let fixed clocks if they wishb

This software is confusing the system to run higher clocks but the guy was very careful not to exceed the safe voltage limit otherwise the chip go pop?

No reason why they can't keep the boost override, that doesn't change the volts.
 
Those Gamers Nexus results are amazing, can't believe it now leads in some of those game engines like GTA V etc which have traditionally been so favourable to Intel.


Because those games like low latency which traditionally Intel has had a major advantage in, AMD finally figured out how to fix its latency problem: L3 cache printer go brrrrrrr
 
Back
Top Bottom