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MVI Formula crash when voltage adjusted

thumpz
Level 7
Hi
I've had the board for a few weeks. Decided I wanted to over clock it but every time I adjust the voltage up any amount it crashes and reboots. I was following the overclocking guide step by step still no change. It will run at 4.2GHz with load-line calibration set to 4. I've been using XMP profile....maybe should set ram up manually? anyone ran in to the same problem?

MVI Formula
4770k
G skills trident 2400 2 x 8GB 1.65v
Samsung 840 pro SSD
WD black 750GB
ASUS 6950
Corsair AX850
Corsair H100i
Windows 7 pro 64
Bios 804
optimized default with XMP 2400 profile
CHV
1100T
GSkillz 8g 1600
Asus 6950 DCII /shaders unlocked
WD Black 1g sata
Cosair AX850
4,885 Views
8 REPLIES 8

Chino
Level 15
Just change the multiplier to the overclock you want and let the motherboard change the vcore accordingly. See if it's stable on its own.

HiVizMan
Level 40
What values are you trying to set? And where are you trying to set them?

What other settings have you changed?
To help us help you - please provide as much information about your system and the problem as possible.

thumpz
Level 7
Im trying to adjust the voltage of the cpu from 1.152 to 1.20 to try to over clock it above 4.2GHz ive tried in the bios manually and in the AISuite both have caused crash reboot. I have made no other adjustments other then the XMP setting profile and I have tried the CPU load-line calibration in the DIGI settings set it to 4 and with that I was able to get 4.2GHz @ 1.152v V core voltage. I have not tried it without the XMP setting for 2400MHz @ 1.65v maybe I should go manually? has anyone else had voltage problems with xmp and ram voltages vs cpu voltage?
CHV
1100T
GSkillz 8g 1600
Asus 6950 DCII /shaders unlocked
WD Black 1g sata
Cosair AX850

thumpz wrote:
Im trying to adjust the voltage of the cpu from 1.152 to 1.20 to try to over clock it above 4.2GHz ive tried in the bios manually and in the AISuite both have caused crash reboot. I have made no other adjustments other then the XMP setting profile and I have tried the CPU load-line calibration in the DIGI settings set it to 4 and with that I was able to get 4.2GHz @ 1.152v V core voltage. I have not tried it without the XMP setting for 2400MHz @ 1.65v maybe I should go manually? has anyone else had voltage problems with xmp and ram voltages vs cpu voltage?


Do not overclock with AISuite, uninstall the program and overclock via the bios only.
And yes, I always recommend manually entering the memory frequency, DRAM voltage, and base timings.
Also try manually increasing the CPU voltage until stability is achieved.
Intel i9 10850K@ 5.3GHz
ASUS ROG Strix Z490-E
Corsair H115i Pro XT
G.Skill TridentZ@ 3600MHz CL14 2x16GB
EVGA RTX 3090 Ti FWT3 Ultra
OS: WD Black SN850 1TB NVMe M.2
Storage: WD Blue SN550 2TB NVMe M.2
EVGA SuperNova 1200 P2
ASUS ROG Strix Helios GX601

thumpz
Level 7
I tried the AISuite as a last resort and I did try small adjustments and any bump at all in voltage caused a windows crash. I will try to manually adjust the ram even though ive fallen in love with XMP. thanks for the help
CHV
1100T
GSkillz 8g 1600
Asus 6950 DCII /shaders unlocked
WD Black 1g sata
Cosair AX850

HiVizMan
Level 40
Please do this. After you have removed AISuite completely.

In BIOS F5 and enter to reset defaults.

XMP profile as mode of OC

Multiplier to 42 (Or 44)

Digi+ LLC to 5

Vcore mode to offset
+
0.020

Leave all else on auto.

F10 and enter.

Boot into OS.

*if you are unable to boot into bios increase the offset amount to 0.030 and try again.
To help us help you - please provide as much information about your system and the problem as possible.

thumpz
Level 7
Thanks I was able to adjust the voltage with the offset and got to 4.4 @ 1.184v and still use the XMP. Thanks for the help from everyone. Going to try all manual settings this weekend see what I can get out of it.
CHV
1100T
GSkillz 8g 1600
Asus 6950 DCII /shaders unlocked
WD Black 1g sata
Cosair AX850

HiVizMan
Level 40
Off set is by far the most efficient method of 24/7 OCing.
To help us help you - please provide as much information about your system and the problem as possible.