I would be happy with a 4.6ghz - 2100mhz ram but cant get pass the 4.5 mark. Cant be a golden chip
4.5ghz is a great speed with Haswell - consider that a 4.5ghz haswell is faster than a 5ghz 3770k. Anyway, the higher your RAM speed on Haswell, the lower your CPU overclock. I'd stick with 1600-1866. Don't bother with 2100. I'd be really happy with 4.5 with the 4770k, personally - there are some 3770k's that begin to struggle around that area (4.6) as well..
But this sudden change under load iis inexplicable to me.
Ok guys, everything ok so far with these settings. I will try later to lower the vcore a little.
Earlier today something really weird happened though,
Today I completed the pull push setup with the two noctua af14 flx that arrived. Yesterday I was cooling the radiator with just one fan because of missing an adaptor for the other.
I was doing stress testing today with a setting of 1.35v core and 4.6ghz, 35 mins no problem in aida64, temps in the low 80s I stopped the test.
Repeated the same test then crashed in the 2 min mark.
Restarted, set 1.36v core and 4.7ghz. Booted up, tested and BOOM!, it hit 100C under load. BSOD
Only one increment of .01v made the cpu temps raise 15-20 degrees.
Restarted, booted up, set the old 4.6 1.35v setting, which was supposed to yield temps in the 80s like before and guess what, BSOD, 100C under load.
Strange isnt it?
Since then I lowered the clock and the voltage to the settings I have now, however the temps never were quite like they were before. I cant understand this.
Im overclocking in asrock extreme6.
Temps idling are in the 30s. But this sudden change under load iis inexplicable to me.
If you were unstable and crashed within 2 minutes at 1.35 at 4.6GHz what makes you think adding .01 volts and ADDING 100MHz would be better????
You're trying to hit speeds that are hard enough to hit with haswell as it is, and your solution was to go higher? Your technique needs some tweaking.
Because you were unstable. That's what unstable means, you can't predict instability, it can happen in 2 minutes it can happen in 2 hours, it can happen with only a handful of applications.
1.35 is a lot of volts to push through a 22nm processor, and your processor was already telling you something at 4.6GHz and your solution was to push it even harder? I was dumbfounded reading that and though I had to be misunderstanding because it made no sense at all.
Anyway, your best bet now is to reset everything to default and see what happens. Cross your figures that you didn't fry your chip
4.5ghz is a great speed with Haswell - consider that a 4.5ghz haswell is faster than a 5ghz 3770k...
For this to be true, Haswell IPC must be >10% than IB, which I have not seen in benchmarks. I'd really like to see some evidence to confirm your assertion.
More realistically, 4.5GHz Haswell = 4.7GHz Ivy, 4.8 at most.
I can try to find concrete benchmarks, but I am extrapolating from my experience of my former 2600k which was able to do 5ghz, and my current 3770k. I did all sorts of benchmarks a year ago when I swapped all of my components out, and my 3770k at 4.6GHz convincingly beat the 5ghz SB in every benchmark.
Every single benchmark was a win for the 3770k with a 400mhz deficit. Now, the performance difference certainly isn't noticeable and only synthetics will pick it up, but seeing as the IVB beats SB even with a 400mhz deficit I'm sure the same applies to Haswell. Absolutely sure - the IPC difference between the 4770k and 3770k is greater than that of the 2600k and 3770k IIRC.
Also, since you specifically mention it, 4.7 / 4.8 ghz is not a realistic overclock for the average 3770k. I'm only able to get 4.7ghz with a TON of voltage with temps that pass 90C during extreme stress testing, I consider my chip to be "golden", if you will - IVB is not that different than Haswell in terms of overclockability / temperatures. Anyone who states otherwise clearly has selective memory. Anyway, the point remains that a Haswell with a clockspeed deficit, even 400mhz, will still pass IVB.