• Welcome to TechPowerUp Forums, Guest! Please check out our forum guidelines for info related to our community.

Intel Not Happy About BCLK Overclocking of 12th Gen CPUs, Warns of Damage

Joined
Mar 13, 2018
Messages
28 (0.01/day)
"Intel does not warranty the operation of processors beyond their specifications..."

Oh! Gee! I care about that! Said no Overclocker... ever.
 
Joined
Dec 28, 2012
Messages
3,944 (0.90/day)
System Name Skunkworks 3.0
Processor 5800x3d
Motherboard x570 unify
Cooling Noctua NH-U12A
Memory 32GB 3600 mhz
Video Card(s) asrock 6800xt challenger D
Storage Sabarent rocket 4.0 2TB, MX 500 2TB
Display(s) Asus 1440p144 27"
Case Old arse cooler master 932
Power Supply Corsair 1200w platinum
Mouse *squeak*
Keyboard Some old office thing
Software Manjaro
True, what I like about amd is that they never make you buy a new motherboard if they release a new cpu,
Except for X370, B350, A320 users, they got told to suckle upon AMD's teat and go buy a new motherboard if they wanted a 3000 series or 5000 series, and that onyl got backtracked when the internet blew up and threw their "support until 2020" promise back in their face. Oh and dont forget the B450 users who want ryzeen 5000.
intel does that everytime
Intel is pretty clear that each socket gets 2 generations of CPU. It's not a surprise, and VERY few people upgrade every generation.
and idiots buying it make them get away with the bs,
You know what's BS? Stating your socket is supported until 2020 then backtracking on that TWICE.

That is capitalism right? we always support the underdog because the one at the top is screwing us anyway they can because they are in an advantageous position like intel did for years and amd before intel, amd was bad too from 2002 to 2006 and then Intel came and blew anything amd had and then amd did almost the same in 2020, yeah they dont care about us or anybody however, i still side with amd as little bit better because of a non motherboard swap every new cpu release. Yeah I will likely need to buy a new motherboard for the new ryzen because of ddr5 but if amd try a intel move and say we need to buy a new motherboard every cpu release then I'm out too and by the way I dont care about them either, not a fanboy, I dont buy things blindly, I'm just a smart consumer.
Yeah you should buy into AM5, right at the beginning, so when AMD leaves you high and dry after 1 more release you can perform olympic level mental gymnastics to explain how this is any different from what intel does.
 
Joined
Sep 14, 2020
Messages
578 (0.37/day)
Location
Greece
System Name Office / HP Prodesk 490 G3 MT (ex-office)
Processor Intel 13700 (90° limit) / Intel i7-6700
Motherboard Asus TUF Gaming H770 Pro / HP 805F H170
Cooling Noctua NH-U14S / Stock
Memory G. Skill Trident XMP 2x16gb DDR5 6400MHz cl32 / Samsung 2x8gb 2133MHz DDR4
Video Card(s) Asus RTX 3060 Ti Dual OC GDDR6X / Zotac GTX 1650 GDDR6 OC
Storage Samsung 2tb 980 PRO MZ / Samsung SSD 1TB 860 EVO + WD blue HDD 1TB (WD10EZEX)
Display(s) Eizo FlexScan EV2455 - 1920x1200 / Panasonic TX-32LS490E 32'' LED 1920x1080
Case Nanoxia Deep Silence 8 Pro / HP microtower
Audio Device(s) On board
Power Supply Seasonic Prime PX750 / OEM 300W bronze
Mouse MS cheap wired / Logitech cheap wired m90
Keyboard MS cheap wired / HP cheap wired
Software W11 / W7 Pro ->10 Pro
If PCIe is independent then NVMe is as well. SATA and USB should be a similar story since both are connected to the PCH which runs on DMI which is also PCIe.
Makes sense. Thanks.
 
Joined
May 8, 2018
Messages
1,571 (0.65/day)
Location
London, UK
Except for X370, B350, A320 users, they got told to suckle upon AMD's teat and go buy a new motherboard if they wanted a 3000 series or 5000 series, and that onyl got backtracked when the internet blew up and threw their "support until 2020" promise back in their face. Oh and dont forget the B450 users who want ryzeen 5000.

Intel is pretty clear that each socket gets 2 generations of CPU. It's not a surprise, and VERY few people upgrade every generation.

You know what's BS? Stating your socket is supported until 2020 then backtracking on that TWICE.


Yeah you should buy into AM5, right at the beginning, so when AMD leaves you high and dry after 1 more release you can perform olympic level mental gymnastics to explain how this is any different from what intel does.
I'm not going to reply to everything because if I do we will take this discussion past my bedtime, about the last thing you wrote, I prefer to take my chances with am5 than intel lga 1200, then we will see who will spend less money in motherboards in 5 years time.
 
Joined
Dec 28, 2012
Messages
3,944 (0.90/day)
System Name Skunkworks 3.0
Processor 5800x3d
Motherboard x570 unify
Cooling Noctua NH-U12A
Memory 32GB 3600 mhz
Video Card(s) asrock 6800xt challenger D
Storage Sabarent rocket 4.0 2TB, MX 500 2TB
Display(s) Asus 1440p144 27"
Case Old arse cooler master 932
Power Supply Corsair 1200w platinum
Mouse *squeak*
Keyboard Some old office thing
Software Manjaro
I'm not going to reply to everything because if I do we will take this discussion past my bedtime, about the last thing you wrote, I prefer to take my chances with am5 than intel lga 1200, then we will see who will spend less money in motherboards in 5 years time.
Why would you upgrade either in 5 years? CPUs from 10 years ago can still maintain 60 FPS average in modern titles. Any modern 6-8 core CPU is going to easily last a full decade, if not longer.

Like, you could have bought a ryzen 1700x, then a 3700x, then a 5800x, upgrading twice, if you bought an AMD X370 motherboard you would have had to buy a new 500 series board to get that second jump, and after ALL that, you get the same game averages that the 8700k was getting in 2017, and unless you are gaming at 1080p144+ none of them will have any appreciable difference anyway. If you wait 5 years, there is going to be new technology out, like NVMe, or DDR5, or newer PCIe revisions, or USB C, and you'll need a new mobo for these anyway.
 
Joined
May 8, 2018
Messages
1,571 (0.65/day)
Location
London, UK
Why would you upgrade either in 5 years? CPUs from 10 years ago can still maintain 60 FPS average in modern titles. Any modern 6-8 core CPU is going to easily last a full decade, if not longer.

Like, you could have bought a ryzen 1700x, then a 3700x, then a 5800x, upgrading twice, if you bought an AMD X370 motherboard you would have had to buy a new 500 series board to get that second jump, and after ALL that, you get the same game averages that the 8700k was getting in 2017, and unless you are gaming at 1080p144+ none of them will have any appreciable difference anyway. If you wait 5 years, there is going to be new technology out, like NVMe, or DDR5, or newer PCIe revisions, or USB C, and you'll need a new mobo for these anyway.
Yeah I totally agree with you but the idea that I can as long as possible use that motherboard for new cpu releases is what makes my buy great, remember what I said, I'm just a smart consumer, meaning the one company that offers the best deal then I'm in and sadly Intel has not been the one for a long time, reason these past years I have not been buying Intel cpus or motherboards, for intel to make me to buy a new motherboard and cpu from them, It has to be an exceptional good deal because I know how they behave based on how they behaved in the past. I was not blind to jump into amd and buy a 5900x, before that I bought a r5 3600 and I had a b450 msi gaming plus which I used with the ryzen 5900x. Want me to keep buying your products? then do not **** me.
 
Joined
Jan 6, 2013
Messages
350 (0.08/day)
This will become a huge thing IF ASUS decides to launch a H610 motherboard with DDR4 and BCLK OC at under 100 bucks.
 
Joined
Mar 20, 2019
Messages
556 (0.26/day)
Processor 9600k
Motherboard MSI Z390I Gaming EDGE AC
Cooling Scythe Mugen 5
Memory 32GB of G.Skill Ripjaws V 3600MHz CL16
Video Card(s) MSI 3080 Ventus OC
Storage 2x Intel 660p 1TB
Display(s) Acer CG437KP
Case Streacom BC1 mini
Audio Device(s) Topping MX3
Power Supply Corsair RM750
Mouse R.A.T. DWS
Keyboard HAVIT KB487L / AKKO 3098 / Logitech G19
VR HMD HTC Vive
Benchmark Scores What's a "benchmark"?
This is a very dangerous activity, affecting corporate income.

investors.jpg
 
Joined
Jan 14, 2019
Messages
12,549 (5.79/day)
Location
Midlands, UK
System Name Nebulon B
Processor AMD Ryzen 7 7800X3D
Motherboard MSi PRO B650M-A WiFi
Cooling be quiet! Dark Rock 4
Memory 2x 24 GB Corsair Vengeance DDR5-4800
Video Card(s) AMD Radeon RX 6750 XT 12 GB
Storage 2 TB Corsair MP600 GS, 2 TB Corsair MP600 R2
Display(s) Dell S3422DWG, 7" Waveshare touchscreen
Case Kolink Citadel Mesh black
Audio Device(s) Logitech Z333 2.1 speakers, AKG Y50 headphones
Power Supply Seasonic Prime GX-750
Mouse Logitech MX Master 2S
Keyboard Logitech G413 SE
Software Bazzite (Fedora Linux) KDE
You're just old. Today, overclocking is epeening about your 5.5 Ghz 241W power guzzler when in fact it won't sustain there for any longer than a second, can't remotely handle anything with the letters AVX at that frequency, and god forbid you run Prime95 on it because how dare you present that surrealistic load on a current day CPU, come on, you know they're not built to handle that. I mean, Intel even said so, on multiple occasions and mobo vendors even gave you the setting :roll::kookoo:

Snowflake OCs, I call them. The value of them is their presence in a christmas tree box with AIO showing those glorious numbers so you can look at your window all day. What do you mean, workloads? This is a consumer CPU. It idles. At best it records a benchmark or Youtube video.
How accurate! :roll:

To be serious, not that you really need to OC a modern CPU or GPU anyway. The extra 100 MHz you sweat blood to squeeze out of it will only mean it works way out of its ideal temperature/power range without you feeling a thing in everyday programs and games.
 
Joined
Dec 26, 2006
Messages
3,859 (0.59/day)
Location
Northern Ontario Canada
Processor Ryzen 5700x
Motherboard Gigabyte X570S Aero G R1.1 BiosF5g
Cooling Noctua NH-C12P SE14 w/ NF-A15 HS-PWM Fan 1500rpm
Memory Micron DDR4-3200 2x32GB D.S. D.R. (CT2K32G4DFD832A)
Video Card(s) AMD RX 6800 - Asus Tuf
Storage Kingston KC3000 1TB & 2TB & 4TB Corsair MP600 Pro LPX
Display(s) LG 27UL550-W (27" 4k)
Case Be Quiet Pure Base 600 (no window)
Audio Device(s) Realtek ALC1220-VB
Power Supply SuperFlower Leadex V Gold Pro 850W ATX Ver2.52
Mouse Mionix Naos Pro
Keyboard Corsair Strafe with browns
Software W10 22H2 Pro x64
People who BCLK overlclock are a weird breed; The gains have been minimal to negligible for about a decade now and the instability and weird issues caused by something unhappy with a BCLK overclock aren't worth the almost imperceptible increase in performance.

Back in the old days when the FSB was decoupled from the rest of the system by a multiplier, you could exploit that multiplier fantastically. These days, ~100MHz is the rule. Go much beyond 103MHz BCLK and you're basically asking for trouble with most configs. There are much better and cost effective ways to get 3% more performance so unless you have already narrowed down which was the best 12900K in terms of silicon lottery from a batch of several, and are just LN2 overclocking for a record attempt, there is no merit to it - the money invested in specific motherboard/RAM that's likely to hold a stable BCLK overclock is better spent on a faster CPU or better cooling.
On top of that, those who want/need real performance aren't going to be buying a celeron :|
 
Joined
Oct 23, 2020
Messages
671 (0.44/day)
Location
Austria
System Name nope
Processor I3 10100F
Motherboard ATM Gigabyte h410
Cooling Arctic 12 passive
Memory ATM Gskill 1x 8GB NT Series (No Heatspreader bling bling garbage, just Black DIMMS)
Video Card(s) Sapphire HD7770 and EVGA GTX 470 and Zotac GTX 960
Storage 120GB OS SSD, 240GB M2 Sata, 240GB M2 NVME, 300GB HDD, 500GB HDD
Display(s) Nec EA 241 WM
Case Coolermaster whatever
Audio Device(s) Onkyo on TV and Mi Bluetooth on Screen
Power Supply Super Flower Leadx 550W
Mouse Steelseries Rival Fnatic
Keyboard Logitech K270 Wireless
Software Deepin, BSD and 10 LTSC
Im customer i dont care about a company thing, if its t my positivity but u can trow BCLK OC to garbage since socket 1155.
Intel made it imposible to oc via BCLK or say u would damage......


The reality why u cant oc via BCLK since 1155 is cause intel will sell u even higher priced chips,
there is no reason why i can oc a 1st gen I3 on 1156 to 4.6 GHz via BCLK but the I3 2120 on 1155 not cause the BCLK is locked.


Atm since nearly 13 years its easy if i need a high Single Thread performance,
i cant get it i needed to buy a garbage G3258 or 9300K in the past and a Z Board.
 
Joined
Feb 20, 2019
Messages
8,332 (3.91/day)
System Name Bragging Rights
Processor Atom Z3735F 1.33GHz
Motherboard It has no markings but it's green
Cooling No, it's a 2.2W processor
Memory 2GB DDR3L-1333
Video Card(s) Gen7 Intel HD (4EU @ 311MHz)
Storage 32GB eMMC and 128GB Sandisk Extreme U3
Display(s) 10" IPS 1280x800 60Hz
Case Veddha T2
Audio Device(s) Apparently, yes
Power Supply Samsung 18W 5V fast-charger
Mouse MX Anywhere 2
Keyboard Logitech MX Keys (not Cherry MX at all)
VR HMD Samsung Oddyssey, not that I'd plug it into this though....
Software W10 21H1, barely
Benchmark Scores I once clocked a Celeron-300A to 564MHz on an Abit BE6 and it scored over 9000.
You're just old. Today, overclocking is epeening about your 5.5 Ghz 241W power guzzler when in fact it won't sustain there for any longer than a second, can't remotely handle anything with the letters AVX at that frequency, and god forbid you run Prime95 on it because how dare you present that surrealistic load on a current day CPU, come on, you know they're not built to handle that. I mean, Intel even said so, on multiple occasions and mobo vendors even gave you the setting :roll::kookoo:

Snowflake OCs, I call them. The value of them is their presence in a christmas tree box with AIO showing those glorious numbers so you can look at your window all day. What do you mean, workloads? This is a consumer CPU. It idles. At best it records a benchmark or Youtube video.
Yeah, the last CPU I bought that was worth overclocking was a 2500K, before Z-series motherboards were mandated for K-series chips adding yet more unnecessary cost to getting your "free" performance (that you had to pay extra for)

That P67 board took a 3.3GHz chip to 5.1GHz all core, though at frankly harmful voltages and untenable temperatures for summer. My daily driver OC was 4.8GHz at 1.4V on a NH-U12 air cooler. You were super-unlucky if your 2500K didn't clock to at least 4.5GHz. Most would do that on stock voltage with the wimpy intel boxed cooler.

Since then, overclocking has been taxed excessively at purchase for the snowflake influencers. Through Haswell, Zen2, Zen3 I've not overclocked. AMD may have been less restrictive about overclocking but you still have to buy a premium model and the 3600X was poor performance/$ compared to the 3600. My 3900X and 5800X have PBO+ disabled. Regular boosting within the TDP is plenty for me and a silent, stable 4.5-4.8GHz boost is better than 4.95GHz of overvolted madness and kiss goodbye to all of your power savings and quiet operation.

Maybe I'm old, or maybe I'm just not dumb enough to throw performance/$ and performance/W out of the window just to get an extra 10% at most. Having the fastest is pointless anyway because tomorrow something faster will get launched with the never-ending march of progress.
 
Joined
Jan 24, 2022
Messages
456 (0.43/day)
I have never dared touch BCLK overclocking, this solidifies it.

The i3-12100F already seemed like a gaming beast for the money in reviews, this just makes it seem ridiculous lol
 
Last edited:

Aquinus

Resident Wat-man
Joined
Jan 28, 2012
Messages
13,171 (2.80/day)
Location
Concord, NH, USA
System Name Apollo
Processor Intel Core i9 9880H
Motherboard Some proprietary Apple thing.
Memory 64GB DDR4-2667
Video Card(s) AMD Radeon Pro 5600M, 8GB HBM2
Storage 1TB Apple NVMe, 4TB External
Display(s) Laptop @ 3072x1920 + 2x LG 5k Ultrafine TB3 displays
Case MacBook Pro (16", 2019)
Audio Device(s) AirPods Pro, Sennheiser HD 380s w/ FIIO Alpen 2, or Logitech 2.1 Speakers
Power Supply 96w Power Adapter
Mouse Logitech MX Master 3
Keyboard Logitech G915, GL Clicky
Software MacOS 12.1
permanent damage to your hardware.
I thought that it's voltages and heat that kill hardware. Higher frequencies without touching voltage should either work or be unstable. Either way, doesn't higher end hardware push these kinds of voltages and currents anyways? The main issue in the past was that touching the base clock impacted other clock domains, like PCIe and DMI. If memory is happy and temps are under control, shouldn't it be okay?
 
Joined
Jan 24, 2022
Messages
456 (0.43/day)
Since then, overclocking has been taxed excessively at purchase for the snowflake influencers. Through Haswell, Zen2, Zen3 I've not overclocked. AMD may have been less restrictive about overclocking but you still have to buy a premium model and the 3600X was poor performance/$ compared to the 3600. My 3900X and 5800X have PBO+ disabled. Regular boosting within the TDP is plenty for me and a silent, stable 4.5-4.8GHz boost is better than 4.95GHz of overvolted madness and kiss goodbye to all of your power savings and quiet operation.
Exactly. I run my 5900X stock and I couldn't be happier. I see it reach 5.2 GHz on some cores.
 
Joined
Feb 20, 2019
Messages
8,332 (3.91/day)
System Name Bragging Rights
Processor Atom Z3735F 1.33GHz
Motherboard It has no markings but it's green
Cooling No, it's a 2.2W processor
Memory 2GB DDR3L-1333
Video Card(s) Gen7 Intel HD (4EU @ 311MHz)
Storage 32GB eMMC and 128GB Sandisk Extreme U3
Display(s) 10" IPS 1280x800 60Hz
Case Veddha T2
Audio Device(s) Apparently, yes
Power Supply Samsung 18W 5V fast-charger
Mouse MX Anywhere 2
Keyboard Logitech MX Keys (not Cherry MX at all)
VR HMD Samsung Oddyssey, not that I'd plug it into this though....
Software W10 21H1, barely
Benchmark Scores I once clocked a Celeron-300A to 564MHz on an Abit BE6 and it scored over 9000.
Exactly. I run my 5900X stock and I couldn't be happier. I see it reach 5.2 GHz on some cores.
But but but but but if you buy an $800 ROG Crosshair Extreme VIII+ GTX Godlike Edition and sink another $250 on a 420mm AIO you might see 5.3GHz!
 
Joined
Jan 24, 2022
Messages
456 (0.43/day)
But but but but but if you buy an $800 ROG Crosshair Extreme VIII+ GTX Godlike Edition and sink another $250 on a 420mm AIO you might see 5.3GHz!
To an extent I don't understand AIOs, why ditch my perfectly fine, extremely silent Noctua cooler for a louder AIO just to get a slight decrease in temperatures? The CPU isn't exactly underperforming and the AIO won't bring huge performance increases. I don't monitor my temperatures all the time while I use my PC. I use it to do my tasks and play games. And air coolers are way more reliable.

I suppose there's the looks argument to be made and yeah AIOs can look better (looks are subjective - I personally dig the look of rugged heatpipes and fin arrays), but for general functionality, it still puzzles me.
 
Joined
Jul 5, 2013
Messages
28,208 (6.74/day)
I thought that it's voltages and heat that kill hardware. Higher frequencies without touching voltage should either work or be unstable.
And this is why the BCLK OC are dangerous. The CPU automatically manages it's voltage internally and it does not expect the BCLK to be out of spec. Forcing the BCLK too high seems to have an effect that causes the CPU dramatically overvolt itself internally, thus causing damage. Granted, this is only the current theory. It's up to Intel to verify what is actually going on.
Either way, doesn't higher end hardware push these kinds of voltages and currents anyways?
There's something more fine-grained happening.
The main issue in the past was that touching the base clock impacted other clock domains, like PCIe and DMI. If memory is happy and temps are under control, shouldn't it be okay?
You'd think, but it seems to have some complicated nuances going on that have yet to be fleshed out.
 

Mussels

Freshwater Moderator
Joined
Oct 6, 2004
Messages
58,413 (7.92/day)
Location
Oystralia
System Name Rainbow Sparkles (Power efficient, <350W gaming load)
Processor Ryzen R7 5800x3D (Undervolted, 4.45GHz all core)
Motherboard Asus x570-F (BIOS Modded)
Cooling Alphacool Apex UV - Alphacool Eisblock XPX Aurora + EK Quantum ARGB 3090 w/ active backplate
Memory 2x32GB DDR4 3600 Corsair Vengeance RGB @3866 C18-22-22-22-42 TRFC704 (1.4V Hynix MJR - SoC 1.15V)
Video Card(s) Galax RTX 3090 SG 24GB: Underclocked to 1700Mhz 0.750v (375W down to 250W))
Storage 2TB WD SN850 NVME + 1TB Sasmsung 970 Pro NVME + 1TB Intel 6000P NVME USB 3.2
Display(s) Phillips 32 32M1N5800A (4k144), LG 32" (4K60) | Gigabyte G32QC (2k165) | Phillips 328m6fjrmb (2K144)
Case Fractal Design R6
Audio Device(s) Logitech G560 | Corsair Void pro RGB |Blue Yeti mic
Power Supply Fractal Ion+ 2 860W (Platinum) (This thing is God-tier. Silent and TINY)
Mouse Logitech G Pro wireless + Steelseries Prisma XL
Keyboard Razer Huntsman TE ( Sexy white keycaps)
VR HMD Oculus Rift S + Quest 2
Software Windows 11 pro x64 (Yes, it's genuinely a good OS) OpenRGB - ditch the branded bloatware!
Benchmark Scores Nyooom.
Of course they're unhappy, they arent charging money for this 'feature'

Outside this being Intel - BCLK overclocking is not exactly safe and can damage other components if pushed far enough. External clock generators should not change anything in this, it is just a measure to circumvent whatever manufacturer has implemented to prevent BCLK overclocking.

RAM, PCIe, NVMe, SATA, USB and most other things that do run in sync with BCLK do need to be able to deal with increased frequencies somehow. 1-2% change might not cause many disruptions but beyond that it gets increasingly more crapshoot. And no, the problems you get may not be simple or obvious :D
unsure if someone else answered, but thats the point of an external clock generator - the other devices can stay at stock bclk speeds, with only the CPU (and DRAM) going up

Vayra86:
You're just old. Today, overclocking is epeening about your 5.5 Ghz 241W power guzzler when in fact it won't sustain there for any longer than a second, can't remotely handle anything with the letters AVX at that frequency, and god forbid you run Prime95 on it because how dare you present that surrealistic load on a current day CPU, come on, you know they're not built to handle that. I mean, Intel even said so, on multiple occasions and mobo vendors even gave you the setting :roll::kookoo:

Snowflake OCs, I call them. The value of them is their presence in a christmas tree box with AIO showing those glorious numbers so you can look at your window all day. What do you mean, workloads? This is a consumer CPU. It idles. At best it records a benchmark or Youtube video.
I love that, snowflake OC's. I've also seen and had issues with people doing stupidly high wattage overclocks that are barely stable, for just short bursts of performance... and the systems keel over and die if they continue using it long term, or if something as simple as high ambients come along

Snowflake OC is the perfect name, because the moment they're exposed to heat the entire thing has a meltdown
 
Joined
Dec 26, 2006
Messages
3,859 (0.59/day)
Location
Northern Ontario Canada
Processor Ryzen 5700x
Motherboard Gigabyte X570S Aero G R1.1 BiosF5g
Cooling Noctua NH-C12P SE14 w/ NF-A15 HS-PWM Fan 1500rpm
Memory Micron DDR4-3200 2x32GB D.S. D.R. (CT2K32G4DFD832A)
Video Card(s) AMD RX 6800 - Asus Tuf
Storage Kingston KC3000 1TB & 2TB & 4TB Corsair MP600 Pro LPX
Display(s) LG 27UL550-W (27" 4k)
Case Be Quiet Pure Base 600 (no window)
Audio Device(s) Realtek ALC1220-VB
Power Supply SuperFlower Leadex V Gold Pro 850W ATX Ver2.52
Mouse Mionix Naos Pro
Keyboard Corsair Strafe with browns
Software W10 22H2 Pro x64
Yeah, the last CPU I bought that was worth overclocking was a 2500K, before Z-series motherboards were mandated for K-series chips adding yet more unnecessary cost to getting your "free" performance (that you had to pay extra for)

That P67 board took a 3.3GHz chip to 5.1GHz all core, though at frankly harmful voltages and untenable temperatures for summer. My daily driver OC was 4.8GHz at 1.4V on a NH-U12 air cooler. You were super-unlucky if your 2500K didn't clock to at least 4.5GHz. Most would do that on stock voltage with the wimpy intel boxed cooler.

Since then, overclocking has been taxed excessively at purchase for the snowflake influencers. Through Haswell, Zen2, Zen3 I've not overclocked. AMD may have been less restrictive about overclocking but you still have to buy a premium model and the 3600X was poor performance/$ compared to the 3600. My 3900X and 5800X have PBO+ disabled. Regular boosting within the TDP is plenty for me and a silent, stable 4.5-4.8GHz boost is better than 4.95GHz of overvolted madness and kiss goodbye to all of your power savings and quiet operation.

Maybe I'm old, or maybe I'm just not dumb enough to throw performance/$ and performance/W out of the window just to get an extra 10% at most. Having the fastest is pointless anyway because tomorrow something faster will get launched with the never-ending march of progress.
nah, we call that wise ;)
 
Joined
May 3, 2018
Messages
2,881 (1.19/day)
Apparently the bclk has been been decoupled in Alder Lake, it only affects cpu, memory and ring bus. it won't affect system stability. Intel's just p!ssed they can't screw you for a K series processor. I see no point in K series on AL, OC'ing is a waste of energy. I'd take a non-K Raptor Lake cpu for sure and maybe tweak bclk a bit if base clocks are much lower than the K's.
 
Joined
Feb 15, 2019
Messages
1,664 (0.78/day)
System Name Personal Gaming Rig
Processor Ryzen 7800X3D
Motherboard MSI X670E Carbon
Cooling MO-RA 3 420
Memory 32GB 6000MHz
Video Card(s) RTX 4090 ICHILL FROSTBITE ULTRA
Storage 4x 2TB Nvme
Display(s) Samsung G8 OLED
Case Silverstone FT04
WoW
This makes 12400 the king of Alder Lake , every SKU above is just waste of sand.
 
Joined
Jan 14, 2019
Messages
12,549 (5.79/day)
Location
Midlands, UK
System Name Nebulon B
Processor AMD Ryzen 7 7800X3D
Motherboard MSi PRO B650M-A WiFi
Cooling be quiet! Dark Rock 4
Memory 2x 24 GB Corsair Vengeance DDR5-4800
Video Card(s) AMD Radeon RX 6750 XT 12 GB
Storage 2 TB Corsair MP600 GS, 2 TB Corsair MP600 R2
Display(s) Dell S3422DWG, 7" Waveshare touchscreen
Case Kolink Citadel Mesh black
Audio Device(s) Logitech Z333 2.1 speakers, AKG Y50 headphones
Power Supply Seasonic Prime GX-750
Mouse Logitech MX Master 2S
Keyboard Logitech G413 SE
Software Bazzite (Fedora Linux) KDE
Yeah, the last CPU I bought that was worth overclocking was a 2500K, before Z-series motherboards were mandated for K-series chips adding yet more unnecessary cost to getting your "free" performance (that you had to pay extra for)

That P67 board took a 3.3GHz chip to 5.1GHz all core, though at frankly harmful voltages and untenable temperatures for summer. My daily driver OC was 4.8GHz at 1.4V on a NH-U12 air cooler. You were super-unlucky if your 2500K didn't clock to at least 4.5GHz. Most would do that on stock voltage with the wimpy intel boxed cooler.

Since then, overclocking has been taxed excessively at purchase for the snowflake influencers. Through Haswell, Zen2, Zen3 I've not overclocked. AMD may have been less restrictive about overclocking but you still have to buy a premium model and the 3600X was poor performance/$ compared to the 3600. My 3900X and 5800X have PBO+ disabled. Regular boosting within the TDP is plenty for me and a silent, stable 4.5-4.8GHz boost is better than 4.95GHz of overvolted madness and kiss goodbye to all of your power savings and quiet operation.

Maybe I'm old, or maybe I'm just not dumb enough to throw performance/$ and performance/W out of the window just to get an extra 10% at most. Having the fastest is pointless anyway because tomorrow something faster will get launched with the never-ending march of progress.
Honestly, I've always found the term "free performance" funny. A K-series CPU, a Z-series motherboard, an overkill cooler... 300 bucks down the toilet when you could just buy a tier (or 2 tiers) higher CPU. :laugh:
 
Top