JSanderson99
Bronze Level Poster
and if I really need to look up a guide for the i5 7600k asus z270e why not give me one? every guide is different.
maybe because I was slightly over my budget as it is?
If you don't know how to overclock yourself, the best advice is for you to take it seriously and read up and around overclocking. If you get it wrong you can damage your components, and invalidate your warranty.
You can contact PCS and ask if they could share the settings they use. You will need to still read their guide though and fiddle with it to reach a stable overclock
they wouldn't guide me through cpu over clock would they?
Guides tell you about the process of overclocking for you to safely do it yourself on any CPU.so telling me to read a guide isn't that helpful either then is it? because every cpu is different, cant follow a guide ;/
If you'd actually engaged with the advice we could have covered things like dropping the SSD to fund other hardware, etc. But you didn't. Also if you're paying PCS to build the PC for you, £9 more to OC it for you if you didn't have a clue would probably have been worth it. But we never got that far in the discussion...maybe because I was slightly over my budget as it is?
yeah but that's what I mean, the guides go into stuff like bclk and flck or somethings, cache and all sorts of things and as clearly stated this is my first proper pc that I actually go into bios with.Guides tell you about the process of overclocking for you to safely do it yourself on any CPU.
If you'd actually engaged with the advice we could have covered things like dropping the SSD to fund other hardware, etc. But you didn't. Also if you're paying PCS to build the PC for you, £9 more to OC it for you if you didn't have a clue would probably have been worth it. But we never got that far in the discussion...
When people ask about overclocking on the forums I usually reassure them that it's easy, that there are lots of free guides, and that it's very hard to damage your hardware if you follow the guides and be careful.
But there is a topic I saw on Tom's Hardware where some guy did actually fry their hardware by entering a random voltage...
Trying to deny reality just to win an argument against people who are actually trying to advise you in your best interests, isn't helping.
yeah but that's what I mean, the guides go into stuff like bclk and flck or somethings, cache and all sorts of things and as clearly stated this is my first proper pc that I actually go into bios with.
If a guide by Asus recommends a voltage you can certainly use that as a guide... you just need to understand the rest of the guide as well or else it doesn't mean much.
I edited my post to talk about auto-overclocking, in case you missed it. Note that auto-overclocking is still not recommended vs carefully and patiently doing it yourself.
Alternatively if you don't know what you're doing, just don't do it. Overclocking is great, but it's not essential and may not make much of a difference. Use your PC at stock speeds until you are more comfortable with the complex stuff.
, the amount of posts where people come along and post not what the author was waiting for. I came on the forums for help and told to read a guide, anyone would of thought of that, think I didn't already read one up?.if you don't want my replies, then next time you know to just answer the question