Intel Skylake / Kaby Lake

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PPB

Golden Member
Jul 5, 2013
1,118
168
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Good nes indeed, any site made a report on how nice the rest of the elements dependant on the bclk take the oc? Specially ram speed and stability

The ultimate combo would be a low clocked (and lowly priced, obviously) 4c8t 1151 xeon in a b150/h170 board with a bios mod to widen the cpu support list and get over the sad lock intel made on 1151 xeons not to work on consumer chipsets. Oc via bclk and you would net a killer system.
 
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Excessi0n

Member
Jul 25, 2014
140
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Is there anything to gain with BLCK tinkering vs multiplier adjustment on a K cpu?

I haven't played around with the baseclock on my 6700K yet, but the big thing is that it allows for much finer control of the final clockspeed. My old Phenom II, for example, wasn't quite stable at 4100 mhz but was rock-solid around 4065.
 

Sweepr

Diamond Member
May 12, 2006
5,148
1,142
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Asrock will expand the list of compatible MBs:

The SKY OC update currently only works on motherboards with Intel's Z170 chipset. However Asrock says that more motherboards should be expected to support the update soon. Asrock claims it has achieved a 19 percent boost on a Core i3-6100, a 32 percent boost on a Core i7-6700, and a 36 percent boost on a Pentium G4400.- PC Gamer

MSI MBs also support BCLK OCing now:

Now, a BIOS update for MSI motherboards brings support for this method of overclocking on several of its Skylake models, allowing users to overclock locked Core i5, Core i3 or even Pentium processors. Right now, the MSI motherboards capable of this include:

XPOWER GAMING TE
GAMING M9
GAMING M7
GAMING M5
G45 GAMING

Latest BIOS here.
Core i7-6700 @ 4.8GHz (MSI XPOWER GAMING TE):

attachment.php
 
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AtenRa

Lifer
Feb 2, 2009
14,001
3,357
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If you can OC a combination of H110/B150 + Core i5 6400 it would be great for gaming PCs.
 

VirtualLarry

No Lifer
Aug 25, 2001
56,349
10,049
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Newegg has an ASRock Z170 Pro4S ATX Z170 with "SKY OC" beta BIOS available, for $80 + $3 ship.

I guess, you could order that one now (I did), or you could wait and see if some of the H110 mobos support non-K SKL OC.
 

ShintaiDK

Lifer
Apr 22, 2012
20,378
145
106
Uff, my Skylake NUC is already delayed. New delivery time seems to be between xmas and new year.
 

Sweepr

Diamond Member
May 12, 2006
5,148
1,142
131
Newegg has an ASRock Z170 Pro4S ATX Z170 with "SKY OC" beta BIOS available, for $80 + $3 ship.

I guess, you could order that one now (I did), or you could wait and see if some of the H110 mobos support non-K SKL OC.

At this point I'm not even sure I would get a H110 MB. Cheapest LGA1151 motherboards are what, $50? Unless you're extremely budget limited the extra $30 is well worth it for a superior Z170 MB.
 

ShintaiDK

Lifer
Apr 22, 2012
20,378
145
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At this point I'm not even sure I would get a H110 MB. Cheapest LGA1151 motherboards are what, $50? Unless you're extremely budget limited the extra $30 is well worth it for a superior Z170 MB.

Yep. 30$ for free memory selection above 2133Mhz, RST support, RAID support, 4 DIMM slots, +3 M.2 slots, +2 SATA +6 USB 3 (+4 total USB), 20 PCIe 3.0 lanes contra 6 PCIe 2.0 and the ability to split the CPU x16 if you choose so and a better board. The H110 is around 10$ cheaper than Z170. The other 20$ is motherboard components.
 
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VirtualLarry

No Lifer
Aug 25, 2001
56,349
10,049
126
At this point I'm not even sure I would get a H110 MB. Cheapest LGA1151 motherboards are what, $50? Unless you're extremely budget limited the extra $30 is well worth it for a superior Z170 MB.

I agree. I made a mistake jumping the gun and grabbing a H110 board. It figures, though, that I see the $80 Z170 board after I ordered that one. Oh well. I can always use it for some future build, or possibly, Asus will eventually release an OC BIOS for it.
 

VirtualLarry

No Lifer
Aug 25, 2001
56,349
10,049
126
Yep. 30$ for free memory selection above 2133Mhz, RST support, RAID support, 4 DIMM slots, +3 M.2 slots, +2 SATA +6 USB 3 (+4 total USB), 20 PCIe 3.0 lanes contra 6 PCIe 2.0 and the ability to split the CPU x16 if you choose so and a better board. The H110 is around 10$ cheaper than Z170. The other 20$ is motherboard components.

I don't think that I would go that far. The $80 Z170 board does NOT have three M.2 slots. If you want those, you'll have to still go for a $180 board.
 

ShintaiDK

Lifer
Apr 22, 2012
20,378
145
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I don't think that I would go that far. The $80 Z170 board does NOT have three M.2 slots. If you want those, you'll have to still go for a $180 board.

Its the chipset options, not whats nessesary implemented.

My Z170 ITX board also only got 2 M.2 slots and 2 DIMMs for example. And certainly not using anywhere near 20 PCIe 3.0 extra lanes.

The point is that H110 contra Z170 in chipset cost alone is peanuts (~10$).
 
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VirtualLarry

No Lifer
Aug 25, 2001
56,349
10,049
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What is the significance of the TDP differences between the two different steppings of the G4400 SKL Pentium dual-core 3.3Ghz CPU?

1151 Intel® Pentium® Processor G4400 QJP8 3300Mhz 65W
1151 Intel® Pentium® Processor G4400 QJZK 3300Mhz 47W

From here:
http://www.biostar.com.tw/app/en/mb/introduction.php?S_ID=805#cpu

Hmm, actually, those are ES steppings, 4-character codes starting with "Q".

Anyone know what the TDP of the retail G4400 stepping is? Is it 54W?
 
Mar 10, 2006
11,715
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What is the significance of the TDP differences between the two different steppings of the G4400 SKL Pentium dual-core 3.3Ghz CPU?

1151 Intel® Pentium® Processor G4400 QJP8 3300Mhz 65W
1151 Intel® Pentium® Processor G4400 QJZK 3300Mhz 47W

From here:
http://www.biostar.com.tw/app/en/mb/introduction.php?S_ID=805#cpu

Hmm, actually, those are ES steppings, 4-character codes starting with "Q".

Anyone know what the TDP of the retail G4400 stepping is? Is it 54W?

Looks like a 54 watt chip!

http://ark.intel.com/products/88179/Intel-Pentium-Processor-G4400-3M-Cache-3_30-GHz
 

jihe

Senior member
Nov 6, 2009
747
97
91
And it begins. :)

ASRock Introduces SKY OC, Overclocking for Non-K Skylake

pro.jpg


pro2.jpg


pro3.jpg


Model and BIOS version required (L1.xx / L2.xx)
Z170 OC Formula L1.92
Z170 Extreme7+ L2.16
Z170 Extreme6+ L1.82
Z170 Extreme6 L1.82
Z170 Extreme4+ L2.01
Z170 Extreme4 L2.01
Z170 Extreme3 L1.61
Z170M Extreme4 L1.34
Z170 Pro4 L2.83
Z170 Pro4/D3 L1.74
Z170 Pro4S L2.73
Z170M Pro4 L2.23
Z170M Pro4S L2.23
Z170M-ITX/ac L1.83
Z170A-X1/3.1 L1.31
Z170 Professional Gaming i7 L1.14
Z170 Gaming K6+ L1.92
Z170 Gaming K6 L1.92
Z170 Gaming K4 L2.23
Z170 Gaming K4/D3 L1.51
Z170 Gaming-ITX/ac L1.53

www.asrock.com/news/events/SkyOC

Right now it's only available for Z170 motherboards. Good news is, all of them will support BCLK overclocking, including the $99 Z170M Pro4S.
Seems like they all go to 4.4-4.5G regardless of starting freq.
 
Mar 10, 2006
11,715
2,012
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I agree. I made a mistake jumping the gun and grabbing a H110 board. It figures, though, that I see the $80 Z170 board after I ordered that one. Oh well. I can always use it for some future build, or possibly, Asus will eventually release an OC BIOS for it.

Can you return it? Z170 should allow you to OC that CPU and you'll get a lot more bang for the $ you spent on the CPU.

Honestly, an overclocked G4400 sounds like a fun system. Bet you can push it to ~4GHz+ on reasonable cooling.
 

dark zero

Platinum Member
Jun 2, 2015
2,655
138
106
Uff, my Skylake NUC is already delayed. New delivery time seems to be between xmas and new year.
Knowing that business are now working at 100% during those times and considering the weather of that place, expect getting the machine next year :V
 

FanlessTech

Member
Oct 25, 2015
33
19
51

Sweepr

Diamond Member
May 12, 2006
5,148
1,142
131
Next one is ASUS. Looks like the popular Z170-A model supports BCLK overclocking too. Managed to push a lowly Core i5-6400 (2.7GHz base) to 4.8GHz! :)

ASUS BIOSes up for Download

Hwbot said:
Update #3: after ASRock now also ASUS and MSI have uploaded BIOSes for their Z170 motherboards. Elmor has uploaded the BIOSes for 7 motherboards: Maximus VIII Hero, Maximus VIII Gene, Maximus VIII Extreme, Maximus VIII Impact, Z170-DELUXE, Z170-A and Z170-E. Note that these are in fact BETA versions of the BIOS and there is thus a long list of issues and warnings: no IGPU, No dynamic change of CPU frequency, No C-states, No Turbo Mode, CPU temperature reading is incorrect, AVX instructions have very low performance and Windows XP ACPI not supported. You can download the BIOSes here.

Air cooled 4.7GHz Core i3 6300 on Maximus VIII Gene http://valid.x86.fr/t2lui6
t2lui6.png


Air cooled 4.8GHz Core i5 6400 on Z170-A http://valid.x86.fr/4n5wnj
4n5wnj.png


LN2 6GHz Core i3 6300 on Maximus VIII Gene http://valid.x86.fr/hv4uf1
hv4uf1.png


Air cooled straight boot 400MHz base clock on Maximus VIII Extreme http://valid.x86.fr/wsjpwm
wsjpwm.png


Core i3-6100 Comparison Table
m1FSwkx.png
 

Sweepr

Diamond Member
May 12, 2006
5,148
1,142
131
Almost missed this, from a few days ago:

Overclocking.Guide: Overclocking Non-K Intel Skylake CPUs (Performance Tests!)

Test Setup:
ASRock Z170 OC Formula
2 x 4 GB TeamGroup DDR4 3866 MHz
NZXT Kraken X61 AiO
Windows 10
Pentium G4400T
Core i3-6320
Core i5-6400
Core i5-6600K
Core i7-6700K

single.png


multicore.png


However, it’s just a matter of time until we will see unlocked BIOS for cheap Z170 or even H170 boards. In the end this is still the best OC-News since Sandy-Bridge considering the fact that I could gain +75% OC which results in +52% performance.

http://overclocking.guide/overclocking-non-k-intel-skylake-cpus-performance-tests