• 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

TheLostSwede

News Editor
Joined
Nov 11, 2004
Messages
17,760 (2.42/day)
Location
Sweden
System Name Overlord Mk MLI
Processor AMD Ryzen 7 7800X3D
Motherboard Gigabyte X670E Aorus Master
Cooling Noctua NH-D15 SE with offsets
Memory 32GB Team T-Create Expert DDR5 6000 MHz @ CL30-34-34-68
Video Card(s) Gainward GeForce RTX 4080 Phantom GS
Storage 1TB Solidigm P44 Pro, 2 TB Corsair MP600 Pro, 2TB Kingston KC3000
Display(s) Acer XV272K LVbmiipruzx 4K@160Hz
Case Fractal Design Torrent Compact
Audio Device(s) Corsair Virtuoso SE
Power Supply be quiet! Pure Power 12 M 850 W
Mouse Logitech G502 Lightspeed
Keyboard Corsair K70 Max
Software Windows 10 Pro
Benchmark Scores https://valid.x86.fr/yfsd9w
You may, or may not have noticed that in certain parts of the interweb, groups of people that are generally referred to as "Overclockers" have managed to get their cheap Celeron G6900's and Core i3-12100's to run at much higher clock speeds than Intel intended and now the company is unhappy about it, as they're anticipating that they're going to lose sales of more expensive CPUs. As such, Intel has issued a warning via Tom's Hardware
"Intel's 12th Gen non-K processors were not designed for overclocking. Intel does not warranty the operation of processors beyond their specifications. Altering clock frequency or voltage may damage or reduce the useful life of the processor and other system components, and may reduce system stability and performance."

Jokes aside, the lower end SKU's of Intel's 12th gen Alder Lake CPUs seem to be phenomenal overclockers, if you have the right motherboards. If the motherboard doesn't have an external clock gen, plus support for adjusting the BCLK on non-K CPUs, then you're not going to have much luck. This means, at least at the moment, that you're looking at fairly pricey Z690 motherboard, although there are rumors that we can expect the odd B660 motherboard that will get an external clock gen, with at least three models already reported to have BCLK adjustment support via beta UEFI updates. Pro Overclockers have already managed to hit speeds in excess of 5.3 GHz with the Celeron G6900 and that is only by adjusting the BCLK and the Voltage, which is no mean feat, as the CPU has fixed clock speed of 3.4 GHz, which makes this a 57 percent boost in clock speed. Intel is said to be looking into this unintended ability to overclock these CPU SKUs and is apparently looking at locking down this ability with a new microcode update in a future UEFI release.

Update: Added a screenshot from TPU's upcoming Core i3-12100F review, showing 5.2 GHz at 130 MHz BCLK.



View at TechPowerUp Main Site
 
Joined
Feb 3, 2017
Messages
3,811 (1.33/day)
Processor Ryzen 7800X3D
Motherboard ROG STRIX B650E-F GAMING WIFI
Memory 2x16GB G.Skill Flare X5 DDR5-6000 CL36 (F5-6000J3636F16GX2-FX5)
Video Card(s) INNO3D GeForce RTX™ 4070 Ti SUPER TWIN X2
Storage 2TB Samsung 980 PRO, 4TB WD Black SN850X
Display(s) 42" LG C2 OLED, 27" ASUS PG279Q
Case Thermaltake Core P5
Power Supply Fractal Design Ion+ Platinum 760W
Mouse Corsair Dark Core RGB Pro SE
Keyboard Corsair K100 RGB
VR HMD HTC Vive Cosmos
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
 

Outback Bronze

Super Moderator
Staff member
Joined
Aug 3, 2011
Messages
2,041 (0.42/day)
Location
Walkabout Creek
System Name Raptor Baked
Processor 14900k w.c.
Motherboard Z790 Hero
Cooling w.c.
Memory 48GB G.Skill 7200
Video Card(s) Zotac 4080 w.c.
Storage 2TB Kingston kc3k
Display(s) Samsung 34" G8
Case Corsair 460X
Audio Device(s) Onboard
Power Supply PCIe5 850w
Mouse Asus
Keyboard Corsair
Software Win 11
Benchmark Scores Cool n Quiet.
Joined
Jun 5, 2008
Messages
89 (0.01/day)
Location
Cheltenham, England, UK
System Name ASUS Vivobook Pro 15 / Zephyrus G16
Processor R9 7940HS / i7-13620H
Memory 16GB LPDDR5X 7500MT/s / 24GB DDR4 3200MT/s
Video Card(s) RTX4060 105W / RTX4060 120W
Storage WD Black SN850X 2TB NVMe / WD SN740 512GB NVMe
Display(s) 15.6" 1080p 144Hz IPS / 16" 1200p 165Hz IPS
Power Supply 240W / 240W
Keyboard Backlit
Software Windows 11 Home 64-bit
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

External Clockgens only affect the CPU and RAMs BCLK, at least according to Der8auer.
 
Joined
Feb 3, 2017
Messages
3,811 (1.33/day)
Processor Ryzen 7800X3D
Motherboard ROG STRIX B650E-F GAMING WIFI
Memory 2x16GB G.Skill Flare X5 DDR5-6000 CL36 (F5-6000J3636F16GX2-FX5)
Video Card(s) INNO3D GeForce RTX™ 4070 Ti SUPER TWIN X2
Storage 2TB Samsung 980 PRO, 4TB WD Black SN850X
Display(s) 42" LG C2 OLED, 27" ASUS PG279Q
Case Thermaltake Core P5
Power Supply Fractal Design Ion+ Platinum 760W
Mouse Corsair Dark Core RGB Pro SE
Keyboard Corsair K100 RGB
VR HMD HTC Vive Cosmos
External Clockgens only affect the CPU and RAMs BCLK, at least according to Der8auer.
If that is the way they implement it, then it's relatively fine.
 
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.
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.
 
Joined
Aug 13, 2010
Messages
5,478 (1.05/day)
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.
That was true, but PCIE clock now seperate, its not tied to BCLK anymore.

Regarding what enables this option - absolutely BIOS. You can technically have it on any board, its a simple in-die clock change. At least from my understanding, even without such "external clock gen", its not an overclocking fairy.

The reality is that you don't get 3%, you get whatever the ADL-S CPU enables you. Can be 10%, can be 20%, can be 30% or more (with 130MHz BCLK)
 
Joined
Jan 14, 2019
Messages
12,548 (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
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.
The best way to overclock a locked CPU is by tuning its power limits to fit your VRM and cooling in my opinion.
 
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.
That was true, but PCIE clock now seperate, its not tied to BCLK anymore.

Regarding what enables this option - absolutely BIOS. You can technically have it on any board, its a simple in-die clock change. At least from my understanding, even without such "external clock gen", its not an overclocking fairy.

The reality is that you don't get 3%, you get whatever the ADL-S CPU enables you. Can be 10%, can be 20%, can be 30% or more (with 130MHz BCLK)
The only BIOSes that have external clock gen are flagship-tier dedicated overclocking boards, right?

At $250-500 premium over a perfectly sensible B660 alternative, you might as well just spend that on a much faster chip - going from an i5-12600K on Z690 high-end board to a 12900F on a B660 is a no-brainer for me. No, you can't overclock the 12900F but it already runs at 5.2GHz so how much headroom is there in the silicon left to overclock anyway? All that for a $200 difference in CPU cost.

The overclocking appeal (for me) is taking something cheap and slow and making it much faster without wasting money to do so. If the upcoming B660 boards with external clock gen cost even $100 more than other viable options, then we're looking at i3 4C/8T vs i5 10C/16T and that's too much of a core count advantage for any overclock to make up IMO. The i5 also already has faster clocks and more cache at stock so you have to reach a 15-20% overclock just to match the i5 performance out of the box and that is just the break-even point ignoring the additional cost of the motherboard.
 
Last edited:
Joined
Feb 10, 2020
Messages
179 (0.10/day)
External Clockgens only affect the CPU and RAMs BCLK, at least according to Der8auer.

In general the same topic was common when FSB-OC was a "up and coming" ( I mean, it was always around..... my Pentium MMX also had a nearly 50% OC under "heavy cooling" --- from 133 to 199mhz :D ) ... back then they also said that OC will void warranty and will damage more than just the CPU. Then they came up with "special OC" variants and suddenly FSB+Multi OC was fine.... but only for those. And technically they still did void the warranty if you did it but at least "those were supposed to be fine" while all others were "do never even think about it" ...

One of the main things I missed when "multi-only" oc became a thing. finding the perfect balance of FSB/Multi and voltage :) ...
 
Joined
Aug 12, 2019
Messages
2,241 (1.15/day)
Location
LV-426
System Name Custom
Processor i9 9900k
Motherboard Gigabyte Z390 arous master
Cooling corsair h150i
Memory 4x8 3200mhz corsair
Video Card(s) Galax RTX 3090 EX Gamer White OC
Storage 500gb Samsung 970 Evo PLus
Display(s) MSi MAG341CQ
Case Lian Li Pc-011 Dynamic
Audio Device(s) Arctis Pro Wireless
Power Supply 850w Seasonic Focus Platinum
Mouse Logitech G403
Keyboard Logitech G110
Come on intel, let people do what they want with the products that they bought..
 

Outback Bronze

Super Moderator
Staff member
Joined
Aug 3, 2011
Messages
2,041 (0.42/day)
Location
Walkabout Creek
System Name Raptor Baked
Processor 14900k w.c.
Motherboard Z790 Hero
Cooling w.c.
Memory 48GB G.Skill 7200
Video Card(s) Zotac 4080 w.c.
Storage 2TB Kingston kc3k
Display(s) Samsung 34" G8
Case Corsair 460X
Audio Device(s) Onboard
Power Supply PCIe5 850w
Mouse Asus
Keyboard Corsair
Software Win 11
Benchmark Scores Cool n Quiet.
finding the perfect balance of FSB/Multi and voltage

Yep I miss those days. Its all a little boring now. Even now the K CPU's will only OC slightly (pending type) as they pretty much boost to the max.
 
Joined
Sep 17, 2014
Messages
22,645 (6.05/day)
Location
The Washing Machine
System Name Tiny the White Yeti
Processor 7800X3D
Motherboard MSI MAG Mortar b650m wifi
Cooling CPU: Thermalright Peerless Assassin / Case: Phanteks T30-120 x3
Memory 32GB Corsair Vengeance 30CL6000
Video Card(s) ASRock RX7900XT Phantom Gaming
Storage Lexar NM790 4TB + Samsung 850 EVO 1TB + Samsung 980 1TB + Crucial BX100 250GB
Display(s) Gigabyte G34QWC (3440x1440)
Case Lian Li A3 mATX White
Audio Device(s) Harman Kardon AVR137 + 2.1
Power Supply EVGA Supernova G2 750W
Mouse Steelseries Aerox 5
Keyboard Lenovo Thinkpad Trackpoint II
VR HMD HD 420 - Green Edition ;)
Software W11 IoT Enterprise LTSC
Benchmark Scores Over 9000
LOL. Let's OC our entry level CPU on a 500 dollar mobo guys, go.

Aaand influencurs and tubers found another headline to base 15 minutes of bullshit on. Yay.
For everyone else: nothing to see here, really.
 
Joined
Mar 10, 2010
Messages
11,878 (2.20/day)
Location
Manchester uk
System Name RyzenGtEvo/ Asus strix scar II
Processor Amd R5 5900X/ Intel 8750H
Motherboard Crosshair hero8 impact/Asus
Cooling 360EK extreme rad+ 360$EK slim all push, cpu ek suprim Gpu full cover all EK
Memory Corsair Vengeance Rgb pro 3600cas14 16Gb in four sticks./16Gb/16GB
Video Card(s) Powercolour RX7900XT Reference/Rtx 2060
Storage Silicon power 2TB nvme/8Tb external/1Tb samsung Evo nvme 2Tb sata ssd/1Tb nvme
Display(s) Samsung UAE28"850R 4k freesync.dell shiter
Case Lianli 011 dynamic/strix scar2
Audio Device(s) Xfi creative 7.1 on board ,Yamaha dts av setup, corsair void pro headset
Power Supply corsair 1200Hxi/Asus stock
Mouse Roccat Kova/ Logitech G wireless
Keyboard Roccat Aimo 120
VR HMD Oculus rift
Software Win 10 Pro
Benchmark Scores 8726 vega 3dmark timespy/ laptop Timespy 6506
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
Agreed
External Clockgens only affect the CPU and RAMs BCLK, at least according to Der8auer.
Agreed I mentioned elsewhere they'll need to have two clock generators one for CPU buss one for pciex, very uncommon.
And only likely on the highest end board.

Or your 50% Oc will destroy your GPU ,nvme drives and usb chips.

No one's shown a bench with a GPU in action for example.
 
Joined
Sep 17, 2014
Messages
22,645 (6.05/day)
Location
The Washing Machine
System Name Tiny the White Yeti
Processor 7800X3D
Motherboard MSI MAG Mortar b650m wifi
Cooling CPU: Thermalright Peerless Assassin / Case: Phanteks T30-120 x3
Memory 32GB Corsair Vengeance 30CL6000
Video Card(s) ASRock RX7900XT Phantom Gaming
Storage Lexar NM790 4TB + Samsung 850 EVO 1TB + Samsung 980 1TB + Crucial BX100 250GB
Display(s) Gigabyte G34QWC (3440x1440)
Case Lian Li A3 mATX White
Audio Device(s) Harman Kardon AVR137 + 2.1
Power Supply EVGA Supernova G2 750W
Mouse Steelseries Aerox 5
Keyboard Lenovo Thinkpad Trackpoint II
VR HMD HD 420 - Green Edition ;)
Software W11 IoT Enterprise LTSC
Benchmark Scores Over 9000
The overclocking appeal (for me) is taking something cheap and slow
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.
 

iO

Joined
Jul 18, 2012
Messages
531 (0.12/day)
Location
Germany
Processor R7 5700x
Motherboard MSI B450i Gaming
Cooling Accelero Mono CPU Edition
Memory 16 GB VLP
Video Card(s) RX 7900 GRE Dual
Storage P34A80 512GB
Display(s) LG 27UM67 UHD
Case none
Power Supply Fractal Ion 650 SFX
The only BIOSes that have external clock gen are flagship-tier dedicated overclocking boards, right?

At $250-500 premium over a perfectly sensible B660 alternative, you might as well just spend that on a much faster chip - going from an i5-12600K on Z690 high-end board to a 12900F on a B660 is a no-brainer for me. No, you can't overclock the 12900F but it already runs at 5.2GHz so how much headroom is there in the silicon left to overclock anyway? All that for a $200 difference in CPU cost.

The overclocking appeal (for me) is taking something cheap and slow and making it much faster without wasting money to do so. If the upcoming B660 boards with external clock gen cost even $100 more than other viable options, then we're looking at i3 4C/8T vs i5 10C/16T and that's too much of a core count advantage for any overclock to make up IMO. The i5 also already has faster clocks and more cache at stock so you have to reach a 15-20% overclock just to match the i5 performance out of the box and that is just the break-even point ignoring the additional cost of the motherboard.
The Strix B660-F/G are ~210€ and both support BCLK OC.
But DDR5 prices make them also unattractive until the first DDR4 board with ext clock gen arrives...
 
Joined
Apr 15, 2016
Messages
1,707 (0.54/day)
System Name The Blind Grim Reaper
Processor Xeon X5675 Westmere-EP B1 SLBYL 4.20ghz @ 1.256v
Motherboard Asus P6X58D-E
Cooling Noctua CP12 SE14, Redux Noctua 1500rpm fan Arctic F14 x3 for intake and exhaust
Memory Corsair XMS3 CMX4GX3M2A1600C9 x6
Video Card(s) EVGA GTX 1060 6GB SC Single Fan Model
Storage Crucial mx300 750gb main system + 1TB mx500 for games and music
Display(s) 22 inch samsung curved
Case NZXT Phantom 530 black
Audio Device(s) Nvidia HDMI through HDMI adaptor for output sound for turtlebeach x12 headset
Power Supply Antec HCG 850 watt
Mouse no brand
Keyboard normal usb keyboard
Software Windows 10 22H2 v1 (main is) and Windows 11 22H2 v2 on WD 250gb 7200rpm (testing purposes os)
Benchmark Scores Cinebench R20 = 2046cb
If Intel decided to lock down the cpu to prevent overclocking what the point in buying the latest and greatest
 
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
Intel's main concern might not be economical. If someone buys a Celeron, a 12100 or even a 12400 and pairs it with a relatively expensive motherboard, then it's a good deal for Intel. But if (average, like me) users who wouldn't buy an unlocked CPU anyway, start flooding fora with CPU or RAM instability issues, or even toasted hardware without mentioning the used voltage, that would be real slander.

External Clockgens only affect the CPU and RAMs BCLK, at least according to Der8auer.
Correct, but did he test NVMe, SATA or USB ports at all? Just asking because I didn't watch the entire video:sleep:.
At least PCIe runs independent from BCLK since Comet Lake I think.
 
Last edited:
Joined
Jun 18, 2021
Messages
2,567 (2.01/day)
"Intel does not warranty the operation of processors beyond their specifications. Altering clock frequency or voltage may damage or reduce the useful life of the processor and other system components, and may reduce system stability and performance."

Like that's not also true for K processors, lmao.
 
Joined
Sep 19, 2017
Messages
190 (0.07/day)
Location
Germany
Processor 7800X3D
Motherboard Asus Strix X670E-F
Cooling MO-RA3 420 LT | 4x NF-A20
Memory F5-6400J3239G16GX2-TZ5NR
Video Card(s) Asus 4090 TUF
Storage 1TB NM790 | 2TB SN850X | 1TB SN750
Display(s) AW3423DW | S2721DGFA
Case Hyte Y70
Audio Device(s) FiiO K11 | DT1990 Pro | Rode NT-USB
Power Supply FSP Hydro Ti Pro 1000W
Mouse G502 X Plus | GPX Superlight 2
Keyboard Keychron Q6 Max
Correct, but did he test NVMe, SATA or USB ports at all? Just asking because I didn't watch the entire video:sleep:.
At least PCIe runs independent from BCLK since Comet Lake I think.
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.
 
Joined
Feb 1, 2019
Messages
3,658 (1.70/day)
Location
UK, Midlands
System Name Main PC
Processor 13700k
Motherboard Asrock Z690 Steel Legend D4 - Bios 13.02
Cooling Noctua NH-D15S
Memory 32 Gig 3200CL14
Video Card(s) 4080 RTX SUPER FE 16G
Storage 1TB 980 PRO, 2TB SN850X, 2TB DC P4600, 1TB 860 EVO, 2x 3TB WD Red, 2x 4TB WD Red
Display(s) LG 27GL850
Case Fractal Define R4
Audio Device(s) Soundblaster AE-9
Power Supply Antec HCG 750 Gold
Software Windows 10 21H2 LTSC
CPU's thermal throttle and power limit throttle, undervolt, and bam overclock.
 
Joined
Dec 30, 2010
Messages
2,200 (0.43/day)
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.

I'd always prefer FSB over multiplier. The 8320 i had ran at 4.8Ghz with a 300Mhz FSB and 2400Mhz DDR3. It was faster then a 5GHz model.

The 2700x i had simply ran at 4.35Ghz at boost. With a 103Mhz BCLK we where looking at a healthy 4.5 up to 4.65ghz boost.

FSB since the 386 always had favor due to the "rest" of the system, bus and all that being increased.

However bclk can be done even without having NVME controllers, NICS refuse to operate. It however requires boards, that do have a seperate clockgenerator, and not rely on the internal CPU.


Uncle tom did some testing back in the day, roughtly 5% extra can be archieved, significant reduction in access latency in CCX's and all that.

Yes i agree "better cooling" is the overall answer to having better performance. It means that Boosting(s) and such will hold longer without reaching it's threshold in temperatures.

As for intel: nice gimmick but who buys a 600$ board to start overclocking with a low end chip?
 
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.
The Strix B660-F/G are ~210€ and both support BCLK OC.
But DDR5 prices make them also unattractive until the first DDR4 board with ext clock gen arrives...
Worth knowing. That's only a $50-60 premium over other B660 offerings.
Presumably there's a DDR4 variant coming soon thanks to the DDR5 drought right now?
 
Top