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kks21199

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  1. Like
    kks21199 reacted to pummetje in 4770k overcloking issues - BSOD   
    your running 1.7v? 1.4v is the max for haswell 1.7v is dangerous you can fry your cpu really easy
    never use auto voltages when overclocking 
     
    try running 4.2ghz at 1.2v 
  2. Like
    kks21199 reacted to Faceman in 4770k overcloking issues - BSOD   
    Just read the guides please:
    http://www.overclock.net/t/1411077/haswell-overclocking-guide-with-statistics
    http://linustechtips.com/main/topic/41234-intel-haswell-4670k-4770k-overclocking-guide/
     
    If you can do 4.2Ghz @ 1.25v that is not the worst result ever recorded, and is a very safe voltage.
  3. Like
    kks21199 reacted to i_build_nanosuits in 4770k overcloking issues - BSOD   
    CPU-Z voltage read is innacurate, chances are you never sent 1.77volts through your chip for real this would explain why it's not dead yet, what did you set the voltages at in your bios so far? anything above 1.4v?
  4. Like
    kks21199 reacted to Faceman in 4770k overcloking issues - BSOD   
    @kks21199
     
    Forget the water loop, temperatures are not what is your problem, its your chip.  I'm using a $30 CPU cooler and getting better results than you.  This is what overclocking with Haswell is like.
     
    Yet another example of why I don't recommend buying expensive CPU cooling for haswell chips until you know that temperatures are the only thing holding you back.  I'm sorry that this happened to you and you got an unlucky chip, but you need to be patient and learn how to overclock safely.  If you can get 4.2Ghz on 1.3v, leave it at that and call it a day.  Also be sure to update the BIOS asap.
  5. Like
    kks21199 reacted to Faceman in 4770k overcloking issues - BSOD   
    You are extremely, extremely lucky that your CPU isn't fried.  In all likelihood, you have already done permanent damage to that chip.  You did not follow the guides that I posted, and you have a less than average chip, in all honesty, unless you absolutely need the extra CPU power, just run your CPU at stock because it isnt worth overclocking for such minimal gains.  Temperatures are not all that matters, Don't go above 1.4v, and even then that is a lot.  Also you want to keep it below 85C MAX while stress testing.  Ideally under 70C when under load for real-world tasks.
    Reset EVERYTHING back to default.
     
    I highly recommend that you update your BIOS to be able to support Devil's Canyon CPUs, because you have to update the BIOS before using the new DC chips, and you need your haswell chip to do so.  Do this now before you destroy your chip, and so you will be ready for the 4790k.
     
    You need to go back and read the guides.  Read them all before applying anything.  You don't have a good chip, that much is clear, so don't expect good results.
     
    Also, please use HWinfo I find it much easier to use than other programs, and easier to read.
  6. Like
    kks21199 reacted to LogicalDrm in 4770k overcloking issues - BSOD   
    I would reset BIOS/clear CMOS. If it shows normal volts in BIOS then it could be software issue, but I'd be sure in these things.
  7. Like
    kks21199 reacted to LogicalDrm in 4770k overcloking issues - BSOD   
    Idle/BIOS temps are only there to show that sensor are working and your cooler is well in place. They don't tell nothing about what is going to happen under full stress.
     
    As for overclocking. It generally voids warranty anyway. Intel has set limits under which they might grant warranty if something happens. The 1.4V voltage limits is there, as is 105C max temps. If you go over those, its no warranty. Under them is still grey area but as OC is so popular now, they might be generous, but they also have special warranty program just for that.
     
    The Extreme setting in BIOS isn't Intel's, it's mobos. And thats meant for people who know what they are doing. Who have custom loop at min and propably are using liquid nitrogen anyway.
  8. Like
    kks21199 reacted to i_build_nanosuits in 4770k overcloking issues - BSOD   
    its not all about temps man, volts can kill a CPU fairly quickly and honestly you are a lucking man that your CPU survived that 1.77volts blow you threw at it! it should thoreticaly be dead ATM...after all if someday you end up hooked to an electic chair they will not monitor your core temps, they will monitor the volts that goes through your body! hehe
  9. Like
    kks21199 reacted to LogicalDrm in 4770k overcloking issues - BSOD   
    Could you use something like CPU-Z where we can see volts while test is running? As mentioned before, every chip is different and only examples are used in guides. You shouldn't use the highest example if you are having trouble with lower ones. For Haswell CPUs 1.3V is max that should be used and 1.4V is absolute max if you crazy (or have ultimate cooling and don't mind if your chip breaks).
     
    About control panel etc. Those are branding and product names. Don't worry about them.
  10. Like
    kks21199 reacted to LogicalDrm in 4770k overcloking issues - BSOD   
    Do you wish to kill that CPU????? Seriously. Lower that volt. I'm surprised that it hasn't blew yet. Read my previous post.
  11. Like
    kks21199 reacted to Quest in 4770k overcloking issues - BSOD   
    Is the cooler seated properly? Proper use of thermal paste? What is the temperature in your room? You are using fans to pump air out of your system, with cool air coming in, yes?
  12. Like
    kks21199 reacted to Faceman in 4770k overcloking issues - BSOD   
    @kks21199
     
         You have to go into Overclocking with a completely open mind.  Your experience is going to be 100% unique to your chip, and your results are going to vary in comparison to others.  Using a Haswell CPU only intensifies how much variation you will experience.  Sometimes, no matter how good of temperatures you have, your chip just cannot hold a stable overclock.  This is often referred to as luck of the chip or the silicon lottery.
     
         What you are currently experiencing is an unstable overclock.  Go into the BIOS and hit F5 to return everything to default settings.  Enable the XMP profile on your RAM and it should go to its designed timings and Mhz.  Do not use the presets.  You will have to follow a guide and do this step by step.  You need to first learn what and how to overclock.  This is a lengthy process if done right.
     
    Here are two of the best guides available:
     
    LTT Haswell Overclocking Guide authored by our very own @ProKoN
    OC.net Overclocking Guide
     
    Another interesting overclocking tool that you should read up on:
    Load Line Calibration
     
    Lastly, here is
     
    WHENEVER YOU STRESS TEST, SET VOLTAGE TO MANUAL/CONSTANT
    WHENEVER YOU STRESS TEST, SET VOLTAGE TO MANUAL/CONSTANT
    WHENEVER YOU STRESS TEST, SET VOLTAGE TO MANUAL/CONSTANT
     
         Prime95 is perfectly fine to use, as long as you set your voltage to a constant rate.  Adaptive voltage while stress testing will fry your chip.  Those temperatures seem high for stock settings on a custom loop.  It could be that your voltage is set to adaptive and it is causing overheating, or something might not be seated or secured properly with your loop.  Since it is your first time OCing, I am going to guess that it is your voltage not being set to manual.  It could also just be that you live in a very warm part of the world and temperatures are going to be higher where you live.
  13. Like
    kks21199 reacted to Faceman in 45 Seconds windows 8 boot up, Maximus VI Extreme   
    Once you get your OS on your SSD, it will cut that boot time in half.
  14. Like
    kks21199 reacted to GloriousPain in 45 Seconds windows 8 boot up, Maximus VI Extreme   
    yeah just remember SSDs slow down after being filled halfway...
  15. Like
    kks21199 reacted to alpenwasser in HELIOS - ASSEMBLED 2015-SEP-06 - (Caselabs SMH10 | Black/Copper | EVGA SR-2 )   
    Cable Lacing Sketches
    Since I've been asked several times now how I did the lacing I've drawn up a few
    very rough (and confusing :lol: ) sketches. Since I can't yet do the video this
    is all I got at the moment.
    Basic Concept
    As you can see (I hope), the basic concept is to have a thread running across
    the top and bottom of the wire bundle and then do loops around them.
    When you do a downwards loop, you go straight down, and when you come back up
    again, you change one wire over when you're in the middle. This pulls the next
    wire to the ones you've already laced.
    (click image for full res)

    Front-View Step by Step
    Step 1
    First you loop the lace around the wire pack like this. Whenever there's a
    crossing of wires in the third dimesion, red denotes the wire running in the
    foreground.
    Magenta represents continuity between steps. This is all just one piece of lace,
    not several.
    (click image for full res)

    Step 2
    After that, loop the lace around the vertical end part once and go between the
    first pair of wires. This is the loop by itself:
    (click image for full res)

    And within context:
    (click image for full res)

    Step 3
    After that you go across the package of wires using vertical loops. As mentioned,
    you go down straight and when you come back up you switch one wire over.
    (click image for full res)

    With context:
    (click image for full res)

    Step 4
    At the last pair of wires, instead of going one wire over (there's no wire there
    of course ;)), you go back across the entire package between the two layers, then
    loop around the vertical end again (as in the beginning) and go to where the start
    of the lace comes out. Then you make a knot.
    (click image for full res)

    Which then leaves you with this mess:
    (click image for full res)

    Note: It's quite tricky to keep everything taut all the time. Instead of trying that,
    simply tighten down at both ends of the lace between steps (you'll easily realize when
    the package is not tightly packed). It greatly depends on what kind of lace you use.
    Nylon is very slippery and quite difficult to work with, lacing cord (usually waxed
    cotton) is quite convenient.
    I will still do a video, but in the mean time this might help a bit. I know it's a
    bit messy, but if you don't understand a specific step let me know and I might be
    able to draw up a clearer sketch for some more detail of that part.
    EDIT: Something I forgot: I tie the two ends of the thread to two large
    paper clips so that I can thread it through the wires. Otherwise this would drive
    a person insane. ;)
  16. Like
    kks21199 reacted to Tech_Dreamer in 45 Seconds windows 8 boot up, Maximus VI Extreme   
    Yup , that's it then , probably had it's run with write/read cycles especially 2.5" one , mechanical hard discs are unreliable especially when it's consumer grade ,you gonna need a need hdd or an ssd if  possible , on the side line try defragmenting the boot drive more than three times or even more , that should significantly lower the boot time , plus getrid of some starup apps if possible , maybe there's a trojan malware hiding on other drives that is causing the issue , run malwarebytes or other AV soft you have ,
     
    Good luck mate.
  17. Like
    kks21199 reacted to GloriousPain in 45 Seconds windows 8 boot up, Maximus VI Extreme   
    dude .-. never fill an SSD  might I reccomend since you apperently use storage like a madman like a http://pcpartpicker.com/part/western-digital-internal-hard-drive-wd1000dhtz cause it sounds like you hate to use your hard drive maybe a faster one will get you to use it more... 
  18. Like
    kks21199 reacted to Kukielka in 3DMark from Steam 9.99$ Only - 60%off   
    This.
     
    I bought it when it was 95% off (Was like about a year ago), sadly steam fixed the price within minutes so I could not get hold of more than 3 additional copies.
  19. Like
    kks21199 reacted to Wats in 3d Workstation, Overclocking, Gaming and Silent PC - Phanteks Enthoo Primo   
    The peak is ok, that can be as high as 95c. But that average load temp of 60 isn't too cool :huh: for stock speeds.
     
    It's only going to get higher too as the TIM under the IHS dries out
     
     
     
     
    Great specs and nice build but the pics are poor quality. Get a lamp with a 'cool white' light bulb to make those pics easier to see
  20. Like
    kks21199 reacted to Jamdude in 3DMark from Steam 9.99$ Only - 60%off   
    Wait for it to go on a Flash Sale, I got it for £1.89 last year.  It's 60% off until the 30th so if it doesn't then you can get it before the sale ends.
  21. Like
    kks21199 reacted to ViruZ_HUN in 3d Workstation, Overclocking, Gaming and Silent PC - Phanteks Enthoo Primo   
    NICE!
     
    But Too small photos. We would be happy if you make your photos bigger and maybe explain a bit about them:D
     
    Thumbs up for this build:D
  22. Like
    kks21199 reacted to papeles in 45 Seconds windows 8 boot up, Maximus VI Extreme   
    15sec on bios? weird
     
    k so, u have recent stuff. That gpu robably has a button, to change bios. It should have uefi and legacy bios.
    so there should be some option on bios (boot section) that gives you the option to do fast/ultra fast boots. For those modes (specially ultra) it is required for the gpu to have the uefi bios chosen.
    After that, you should do windows install as uefi. You can google it easy, you just need to make a uefi enabled usb pen with windows, there are over 9k guides on web.
     
    this, in my experience, gives you the fastest boot time, 5secs on my pc from power button to windows.
     
    I'm sry if i didn't make sense, im on some meds that put me confused, i don't know if i'm even saying this right (im not joking, im stoned by meds)
    1-make a usb for a windows uefi installation
    2-put gpu with uefi bios enabled
    3-put the motherboard bios on ultra fast boot (or equivalent option)
    4- install windows on ssd
    5- have fun
     
    edit (links):
     uefi stick   http://www.eightforums.com/tutorials/15458-uefi-bootable-usb-flash-drive-create-windows.html
    Cant find a decent bios image to show fast boots modes on asus. I'm not experienced on asus bios, so look for it yourself.
    Your gpu says it's UEFI compatible (checked it on website)
  23. Like
    kks21199 reacted to Sauron in 45 Seconds windows 8 boot up, Maximus VI Extreme   
    Oh ok I thought he didn't because he doesn't have it in the original post
  24. Like
    kks21199 reacted to Ciccioo in 45 Seconds windows 8 boot up, Maximus VI Extreme   
    45secs is a lot even for an HDD anyway
    i just tried with my laptop (which is nothing special, with a 5400rpm hdd) and it booted up in a bit less than 30secs
  25. Like
    kks21199 got a reaction from The_Strict_Nein in 4770K 40 degree when idle   
    So waiting for it to go as much as it can

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