boobteg4642 Posted October 23, 2019 Author Posted October 23, 2019 4 minutes ago, cbjaust said: You might want to re-acquaint yourself with the rules especially for Cinebench. (Hint: show the full rendered image and a full uncropped desktop including the clock) Thank you, yeah your are right I am not fully aware of the rules. I will research them. Quote
boobteg4642 Posted October 23, 2019 Author Posted October 23, 2019 (edited) 7 minutes ago, avalanche said: Well you can get going now doing scores. You just need search out scores in your range you can hit. I bet if I could get my clocks up to your speed, I would get the same score. I jumped from 455 to 597 going from stock to 4400mhz. I don't know how to make it post past 4700mhz though, voltage alone doesn't get it to boot. Any idea what voltage the NB should be at at 2500mhz? Maybe 1.25? Edited October 23, 2019 by boobteg4642 Quote
cbjaust Posted October 23, 2019 Posted October 23, 2019 Well, I'd hope so otherwise what would be the point of competitive overclocking? Give it 1.35v and see. Quote
boobteg4642 Posted October 23, 2019 Author Posted October 23, 2019 K gonna try 1.35 now. I don't know what the difference is in VID and vcore in hwinfo 64. I can change the VID with AMD overdrive, but not in my bios, in my bios I can change vcore but not VID. Quote
boobteg4642 Posted October 23, 2019 Author Posted October 23, 2019 10 minutes ago, cbjaust said: Well, I'd hope so otherwise what would be the point of competitive overclocking? Give it 1.35v and see. I can't choose 2500mhz for my nb in my bios, only 24 or 2600, so I opted for 2400 to be safe and it booted. It just doesn't seem like going from 2200 to 2400 would require a 1.2 to 1.35 volt change. But I don't know that well obviously. Quote
boobteg4642 Posted October 23, 2019 Author Posted October 23, 2019 This guy got a better score than me with his NB at 2200 and core at 4400, than I did at nb 2500 and cpu 4600. There is something going on that I don't know, or something I don't know to change. He even has the same exact processor with slower RAM. https://hwbot.org/submission/3944223_oconsauce_cinebench___r15_fx_8300_713_cb/ Quote
cbjaust Posted October 23, 2019 Posted October 23, 2019 (edited) VID is what the CPU asks for vCore will be what the board is supplying. You can always drop the CPU-NB volts and see when it stops posting. CPU-NB multiplier is whole numbers so to get in between you'll need to give the Bus Speed more MHz. Edit: you can run Cinebench with relatime priority and it sometimes results in beter scores. Also note you need to be on Windows 10 unless you're using BenchMate Edited October 23, 2019 by cbjaust Quote
DR4G00N Posted October 23, 2019 Posted October 23, 2019 First off you have to use Windows 7 (or XP) for all AMD CPU's and pre-Skylake Intel CPU's unless your using the aforementioned Benchmate program. Your scores do look to be pretty low but I think it's a bloated OS issue more than anything hardware related. You also need to fix your screenshot's, the scoring window along with the render need to be in full view and unobstructed and CPU-Z CPU & Memory tabs also need to be in the screenshot. Something like this, Quote
Crew Leeghoofd Posted October 27, 2019 Crew Posted October 27, 2019 Use Realtime for CB and a proper dialed in Operating and SubSystem Quote
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