- Aug 25, 2001
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What do I need to know?
I'm using a Biostar H81MHV3 Flex-ATX mobo (2 slots), and a G3258, and Win10 1607 64-bit Home, 2x8GB DDR3-1600, probably running at 1333. No video card (yet - GTX950 2GB planned.)
Anyways, I flashed the older 123 BIOS, that allows G3258 overclocking, and I set the CPU Ratio to 40, booted the Win10 installer, BIOS POST said the CPU was running at 4.0Ghz.
When Win10 finished installing, I installed Waterfox and CPU-Z, and now CPU-Z is telling me that the max it goes up to is CPU Ratio 32, although it gives a range of 8-40. But it never seems to hit above 32.
I know that Win10 has some microcode updates for Intel, and that the first released version of Win10 would actually BSOD if you were overclocked on a G3258 and non-Z97 board.
I thought newer versions of Win10 fixed that, and indeed, I didn't error or BSOD, but now it seems that the CPU is limited to a 32 CPU ratio.
Does anyone know how to get around this limitation in Win10 1607 64-bit?
I'm using a Biostar H81MHV3 Flex-ATX mobo (2 slots), and a G3258, and Win10 1607 64-bit Home, 2x8GB DDR3-1600, probably running at 1333. No video card (yet - GTX950 2GB planned.)
Anyways, I flashed the older 123 BIOS, that allows G3258 overclocking, and I set the CPU Ratio to 40, booted the Win10 installer, BIOS POST said the CPU was running at 4.0Ghz.
When Win10 finished installing, I installed Waterfox and CPU-Z, and now CPU-Z is telling me that the max it goes up to is CPU Ratio 32, although it gives a range of 8-40. But it never seems to hit above 32.
I know that Win10 has some microcode updates for Intel, and that the first released version of Win10 would actually BSOD if you were overclocked on a G3258 and non-Z97 board.
I thought newer versions of Win10 fixed that, and indeed, I didn't error or BSOD, but now it seems that the CPU is limited to a 32 CPU ratio.
Does anyone know how to get around this limitation in Win10 1607 64-bit?