After years of disinterest in overclocking, finally sit down and learn the process

>after years of disinterest in overclocking, finally sit down and learn the process
>in the middle of checking stability
>my i5-4670k isn't the best silicon but can easily reach 4.3GHz on air
>adjusting voltages, experiencing crashes
>finally say fuck it, increase it to the point where it survives IntelBurnTest
>but it crashes while loading some games
>restart and eventually forget about the crash
>update BIOS as it's 7 versions behind
>shit bricks when i remembered my overclock

Anyone else get careless nowadays? A few years ago, i would've slapped my current self for this.

I splilled beer in my cpu last week

idgaf.

>tfw Black Edition Phenom II X2 550
>aftermarket air cooler
>never once bothered with OCing
Tbh my mobo doesn't look like it's very suited for it, doesn't have heatsinks on VRMs

>G3258
>3,2GHz
>Trying to 4GHz
>Crash
>Sweating and shitting bricks
>Back to 3,2GHz
>Me retarded

Are you pushing the cache ratio at the same time as the core?

Most G3258s overclock easy when you leave cache at stock.

Overclocking is a meme. No reason to trade stability, lifespan and low temps for a tiny boost in performance.

>Buy 5820k
>don't overclock it
>browse Sup Forums

This, unless you use AMD and are trying to save some money, there's really no reason to over clock, if you want to spend so much on fans and water cooling systems then you might as well just buy a new processor.

80% of Sup Forums in a nutshell.

Does it power on or completely dead?
If your board has AMI BIOS, try to format a 4GB (or less) flash-drive into FAT, make it bootable(active), drop the bios file on it, disconnect all devices from your mobo (all drives need to be disconnected), leave only one RAM stick in the first slot next to the CPU, reset CMOS, put the flashdrive in the top-left-most usb port on your motherboard (do not use frontal case port) and turn it on while holding Ctrl+Home. This will initiate BIOS restoration process and the BIOS will be loaded from your flash-drive.
If it's Award BIOS, just google the instructions for it. But in most scenarios it will work with same method as AMI.
It's very old AMI/Award version you have there (pre-2010), it will much likely not work with usb flash drive and you will need to use a cd or floppy.

From an engineering standpoint, yes. My professors have said this over and over about modern CPU's. You trade stability and the lifespan of your CPU for a mild performance increase you probably won't even notice. If you need the performance that bad, buy a new processor.

I never said it went wrong.

Why would anyone overclock anyway? In most cases it's the ram or any other component that bottlenecks the CPU overclocked or not.

Most Intel CPUs like the 4670k are rated for up to 1.3v, but come out of the box

rendering

And then there's other cases where the CPU itself is the bottleneck

If you have AMD and you buy entry-level model like FX-8300 for example, you get at least 10 to 15% extra performance thus making it equal to more expensive factory-overclocked FX-8350 or FX-8370. That is the point of overclock - pay less to get more.
With Intel you cannot do that because of their jewish processor locking policy. But back in the days they used to be like AMD and were allowing overclocking of nearly any model.

This.

There's a reason why CPUs are clocked at certain speeds.

Overclocking ALWAYS introduces more instability, no matter how much testing and cooling you do.

>My professors have said this over and over about modern CPU
What about GPUs?

Bump

Bump

Bump

Bump

Same thing, unless you replace your GPU every other generation, keep it at stock clocks.

Thanks.

Oh look, the shills from BIG CPU are here to feed us their corporate garbage. Everyone say hi to the shills, now.

I've had my CPU OC'd to double its base clock speed for 3 years now with nothing but stock fans, and I've noticed no instability to speak of. The difference is staggering. It's like trying to slide a wooden block down a hill coated in grease vs a hill coated in molasses.

I once used a running cpu to jack off with. Was cool mane

Agreed. Some people forget what that silicon is actually rated for. Reasonable OCing(not talking Dry Ice, LN2, or more than an AIO WC kit), especially w/in manufacture max Vcore, will not reduce lifespan unless temps are left way out of check. Which would be the same if @ stock too.

Dumb frogposter

My 4690K couldn't do 4.5 without increasing the voltage past 1.25v :(

>buy a 4790
>don't overclock because why would I need that
Why?

Are you me?

the fuck am i reading

>own an i5-2500k
>never OC'd it