High 24/7 overclock temps question

Caporegime
Joined
29 Jul 2011
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In acme's chair.
Hi 8 Pack,

If I were to run an i5 2500K at 5GHz with 1.42v at 100% load for around 8 hours a day, 7 days a week (with the system being used normally the rest of the time - not being turned off), what temperature should I be aiming to run the chip at to avoid degradation?

Or is 1.42v too high to run at 100% load for such long periods of time without degradation?

Cheers :D
 
I might see what voltage is needed for 4.8GHz then. I don't really want to degrade the chip if I can help it, I would prefer to keep it for a reasonable amount of time. It had previously been running at 4.7GHz with 1.377V.
 
Currently at 4.8GHz (48x100) with 1.4v offset and LLC on high (voltage usually hovers around 1.38v)

Running prime95 Blend temps are hovering between 60°C and 65°C (they peaked at 68°C on a couple of cores and then gradually went back down)

When it comes to overclocking I know the basics, but that's it. I have left all other stuff alone (all the C1/C3/C6 stuff and PLL and other things which I dont understand) - is there anything I could/should do do bring those temperatures down a tad more? :)

*edit* after about 30 mins its closer to 70 now, but I am pulling the warm air from inside the case, out through the top of the case, in a warm room, on a warm day. :p

*edit again* it failed after an hour - by failed I mean BSOD then re-start :(

Any help appreciated :)
 
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Is prime the main use for your rig?? If not an hour is more than enough. Just use the rig or push it further.

With SB leave IEST enabled, but disable C States, leave Spread Spectrum on. Try tuning PLL volts down. This often helps on SB.

Your temps are fine so dont worry about that.

I currently have: 48 x 100, 1.4v offset, LLC on High (1.38v~ under stress), VRM spread spectrum enabled, PLL overvoltage enabled. All other values such as C states, base clock, power limts, current limits, PCM/PLL/VCCIO voltage, spread spectrum and so on are on their default/auto values.

Folding is one of the main uses, and I would like to fold on the CPU if possible, so stability under extreme loading is essential really.

I'll try doing those things later, cheers 8 Pack :)

How much should I bring the PLL voltage down by to begin with? And do I disable all C-States?
 
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Currently running Blend again with:

48 x 100
1.4v offset (1.37 - 1.38v under stress)
LLC on High
VRM & CPU spread spectrum enabled
PLL voltage on 1.75 (default = 1.8)
PLL over-voltage enabled
C1E, C3 & C6 states disabled
Phase control 'Extreme'

CPU current capability, power settings, current settings, VRM frequency, duty control, VCCIO/PCM/DRAM voltages and other stuff on default/auto.

All is well 30 minutes in, here's hoping it stays that way. :)

*edit* failed (BSOD - Auto restart) after 70 minutes :(
 
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Yeah but I want to use the system for folding, which will put a-lot of strain on the CPU. In my last system, folding strained the CPU even more than Blend in some cases, which is why I want to make things Prime stable :(

The PC will be used for gaming as well, but it will be folding at night, all night, every night.

Trying 4.7GHz with 1.38v offset, LLC high etc etc now.
 
Folded for 10 - 12 hours straight with no issues, and then got a 0x124 BSOD while on Youtube (after the system had been off for a while and turned back on again) :rolleyes:

Bumped the VCORE up by 1 click.
 
Woke up to an un-responsive system on the 7th, so hard reset and checked the event log and it was the same BSOD code.

I bumped the VCORE up by another click and it has been folding solidly, as stable as anything for the past couple of days, with a bit of gaming here and there as well. :)
 
Okay so I have been using the system fine for a week, folding for extended periods of time (up to 18 hours in one go), gaming, video/image editing, rendering and so on and everything has been fine and dandy.

Woke up this morning to a system which was off. Turned it back on and it had BSOD'd with the same error code (124) in the night.

What does VCCSA voltage do, and how much should I adjust it by? :)
 
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