ASUS ROG Maximus X Apex review

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Overclocking

Tweaking & overclocking

Overclocking and tweaking then. Always invest in good hardware by the way (MOBO/PSU/Memory/Cooling), the cheaper motherboards often are not well tuned or have broad-spectrum features for enthusiast overclocking. Also get yourself a good power supply and proper processor cooling. Overclocking with a more core processor (doesn't matter if that is Intel or AMD) is more complicated than you expect it to be. Overclocking multi-core on a high clock frequency is a relatively easy to do job, but is managed best from the BIOS.


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The Guru3D reader-base overclocks mostly from the BIOS to try and find the maximum stable limit. The generic overclock procedure for multiplier based overclocking is as follows:

Your reachable target for Coffee Lake is 5 GHz and 5.2 GHz with a good processor.

  • Leave base clock (bus) for what it is right now (100 MHz)
  • Set the per core multiplier at a maximum of your liking:
  • Example 1: 100MHz x 50 = 5000 MHz
  • Example 2: 125MHz x 40 = 5000 MHz
  • Increase CPU voltage; though AUTO often works fine on many motherboards you can do it manually as well. Start at 1.35 ~ 1.40 volts and work your way upwards into a state of equilibrium in perf and cooling temps.
  • Make sure your processor is properly cooled as adding voltage = more heat
  • Save and Exit BIOS / uEFI 

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In our case we got all cores running at 5200 MHz, however, this results in extra power consumption and heat levels. Our Corsair LCS cooler was barely capable of cooling the proc enough as shown below, roughly 1.40~1.425 Volts is needed and obviously we enabled the XMP profile on the memory for dual-channel 3200 MHz. 


 Oc_temp

The temps run high when overclocked over 5.1 GHz - in this case, we hit 90~95 Degrees C at 5.1 GHz / 1.425V with the H110 LCS from Corsair. Mind you that we changed our stress test software towards AIDA with CPU, FPU and Caches stressed.

Power Consumption

Adding extra voltage on the CPU for the OC also has an adverse effect on the overall energy consumption. Under stress and overclocked we all of a sudden use roughly 380 Watt under full processor load (!). That is power consumption for the whole PC measured at the wall socket side including a GeForce GTX 1080 idle. Overclocked in idle your system will use roughly 10 to 15 Watts more on average. Below, an example of another setup, not this particular one, to observe and understand the effect of an overclock a bit better.

 

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Some OC Scores

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Prime at defaults sits at 119 Seconds on 1M workloads, you shaved off ~17 seconds with this tweak.

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Give or take 1400 CB is the default score for the 8700K. At 5.2 GHz you are reaching ~1600 points. BTW some people asked to have it included: that is 216 CB for a single 5.1 GHz thread CB OC run.

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Default CPU

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Overclocked CPU - (GPU clocked default)

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