Seen that you liked my post. So thought it would be right to let you know that it worked perfectly On my 5600x. Tested with OCCT linpak for an hour, and idle on desktop for an hour. Also gained 200 points on timespy CPU score.
I downloaded Ryzen Master a few days ago. Didn't bother with it because I refused to believe the undervolting process could be this simple. It was. Thanks!
This worked for me. Thank you so much. My processor was getting into 90c and it was scaring me now it's much cooler in the 60's and 70's thanks so much
one of the best guides i have ever seen in my life, went from 80 on load to 66-68 with more stable performance on stock cooler 5 5600. thank you so much
This video has the most added value of all the ones I've seen on YT so far. This is really incredible, performance is top and the temperatures are down, feels like a new system. Thank you for that. R7 5800X on X470 👍🤩
I used the exact method in this video, and voila! You're the man! Wish I found this earlier. My system is now running at the lowest possible temperatures. Not to mention the significant boost in performance. Ryzen 9 5900x Aorus Elite B550m Noctua nh d15. Thanks man. Subbed and liked.
I got +20% average fps boost with these settings on MSI x570 Tomahawk / R7 5700X . PPT/TDC/EDC set in BIOS to +200 (saw in some video that state those values just to max it out) same values reflected in Ryzen Master. Then Boost Override is set to 100. PBO Sclar is set to off. Curve optimizer-per core and after test it set all cores to -30. Control Mode is set to Auto Overclocking. So shortly its curve optimizer / per core all -30 / Auto Overclocking. No issues in games, temps are less 7-10 degree under load. On liquid 120mm ID-Cooling. Max temp in this OC mode under load reach 78C. Room temp 26C.
I’m pretty amazed how well Curve Optimiser worked.. here my results with Cinebench r23 Stock: score 15025, 82,4 celsius, pulling 94,3W. With CO - per core: Score 15848, 67,2 celsius, pulling now 72,2W. More then 20% of power reduction and 15 degrees cooler!
Thank you so much for this. I wasn't even aware that Ryzen Master had the auto curve optimizer. I'd been struggling with stability when trying All-Core offsets, but never had the time nor the inclination to dial in per-core in BIOS. Now I ran it through RM and took a note of the values. Then I went into BIOS and input those values into the curve optimizer. Now it's permanent. Thanks again!
One of the most precise videos I have ever watched! All other videos I have watched has so much BS in it that I can't understand it so you have definitely simplified everything. I'm running to Optimizer right now and hopefully everything will work.
Clear, concise guide - thank you! I had previously adjusted my 5900X All Core PBO in BIOS (-25), but ran this per-core optimization to see what it came up with. All cores are now individually set to -29. 6.3% increase in Cinebench R23 score over stock, and I've seen the CPU clock at 4.8GHz during Unigine Heaven benchmark - all at the same power. Temps in high 70s still bug me, but this is a Corsair a200 and despite the dedicated, custom AIO I'm not sure the single case fan is moving enough air through its radiator to do much better. Once my warranty runs out maybe I'll try re-pasting.
i have read another guy owning the 5900x and he got 77C max as well and very stable computer. He did set the PPT , TDC and EDC to reduced values, and set -25 like you did in core #0 to #5 and on core #6-#11 he did set -30, as the 5900 is built on 2 chiplets. Also you should use Artic mx-6 paste, which seems the best with 20% improvement. also you need a case with good airflow. The Cooler Master MA824 AM5/AM4 seems the best to air cool even the 7950x3d series. it beats Noctua D15. it is massive with 8 pipes. I plan to buy the 5900x soon, i will see if i get the same result. But i will try with my current cooler first, the Cooler Master hyper 212 evo AM4 with 4 pipes only. another great cooler and maybe the best could be the Artic Freezer AIO 420mm which provide the lowest temp, but the MA824 is an air cooler so it require less management than AIO.
@@CC-gt3ro Thanks for the reply. The a200 is a custom pre-built, small footprint ITX tower, so changing cases or coolers really isn't an option. It has two custom AIOs - one on each side of the case, and a fan at the top ventilates both. Works fine as long as the fan is responding to temp. I think the real problem with Corsair's design is that the sensor that controls the only fan in the system (a 140 in the 'roof' of the case) is on the MOBO - it's not actually looking at CPU or GPU temp. For example, while downloading a new game, the CPU will go into thermal limit before the fan speed starts increasing. This is a bit odd, IMHO. I'll leave it be as long as it's in warranty. My original a200 purchase had to be replaced due to pump failure - this one was shipped in Jan of this year but warranty still runs out in 6 mos. When it does, in addition to maybe re-pasting, I'll start experimenting with things like uninstalling iCue and using Fan Control instead, which can trigger fan adjustment based on any combination of temps. It's a great little system, but thermals are notoriously sub-par. It's basically a tradeoff for the awesome (IMHO) form-factor.
Has it been pretty simple since you last did this? Have you been running the same settings since you last posted? I was curious to do it in bios, but I might do it under Ryzenmaster, I don't know if doing it is Ryzen master vs doing in bios makes any difference if one is more reliable than the other? I've heard some says its the same, and others swear that Ryzenmaster is bad. 🤷
@@Snafu2346 Remained stable for as long as I used the system. I built a new custom game system and the a200 has been sitting on my bench, idle, since then. So, although I can say it ran great with these Ryzen Master settings for as long as I used it, I'm not currently running that PC today. FWIW...
Did a per core auto optimization on a 5600 and went from 77W / 68C to 44W / 55C at 100% utilization on a $14 92mm budget cooler. This was with a conservative -20 step (baseline is -30 at start) initial undervolt. Crazy efficiency.
best ryzen master guide on youtube, no one else talks about optimizer per core, it's always "all cores". For my new 7600X, I got -28 on all cores except 2 had -26.
ive never done something like this before. Im currently running a 5600 and some games it his 85c and im using the Prism Cooler from the 2700x. How did it go for you? Im nervous that it will break my system if it fails or something, and i dont know how i would get it back to normal or whatever
@@sylviorapuano2688 It undervolts the CPU the CPU will run colder so even less chance to break and more performance cuz it will run at higher clock due to its low temperature.
Love this video! I recently purchased the 7950X and also the X 3D I went with the X3D to save on power consumption however I did not like the noise that it was about the same as the X variant so I decided to go back with the original 7950 X and followed your guide to optimizing with RM work great ! Other video on UA-cam about RM makes it so complicated for beginners we don't wanna be overwhelmed we just wanna get our systems quiet and run efficiently without losing much performance :)
The problem with curve optimisation is that it does not change the actual curve itself. It merely "drags" the existing curve left along the (x, voltage) axis if applying a negative offset or right if applying a positive offset. This can and often results in a perfectly stable machine when run flat out but an unstable machine when the workload is light, since the offset which might be perfectly fine at 1.2 volts is not fine at, say 0.5 volts, especially since the lower the voltage, the higher the relative undervolt. The only way to truly test a curve offset is prolonged use of the machine at varying workloads using the real world applications the machine was built for. A good test for curve optimisation is the Serious Sam Fusion benchmark mode since unstable curve optimisation at lower voltages will almost always result in a screen freeze during a cut scene or when returning to the menu after the benchmark is run. Bottom line is that to be honest, the Ryzen Master automated curve optimisation is largely useless for real world usage and merely shows what voltages the CPU requires to run stable when flat out.
Happened to have the same cpu as you had in this video, was surprised it ran so hot. Did the Curve Optimizer and it really helped, especially during editing with Adobe Premiere Pro the CPU had to tendency to suddenly increase it's power. Now no longer!
5600X In BIOS, I first adjusted all the Load line calibration settings, mode 2 on power delivery, restarted, then I applied XMP on the ram, restarted, then I activated manual PBO. I went into advanced settings, selected the Optimizer tab, clicked on the bottom right corner on the button that says "Copy current" to copy my bios settings onto Ryzen Master. Then I clicked the "per core option" and then "Optimize". Here's the thing, during the test cycle you can see Ryzen master do a multicore test, during this test take note of the PBO values that are not reaching 99-100%, for example, PPT at 40%, EDC at 80% TDC 99%. In order to see real results you have to first adjust the PBO values so that they are all at 99-100% at max load. This apparently affects it's efficiency. So if you get 80% load on the TDC at 100, you have to lower the TDC to 80-81, oddly enough, when you do this, temps increase and max peak speeds do to. Increase the PPT while keeping the TDC and EDC balanced at max tilt until temps are around 84-87 Celsius. For me it was PPT 120, TDC 80, EDC 95. THEN I ran the optimized, it then cycled through each core and after 50 minutes yielded the most efficient per core settings possible. I boost up to 4850 single core and 4720 multicore with temps below 87 celsius. Almost all the cores can boost up to and above 4800 on single core loads. After that you can mess around with the Scalar but It didn't really yield and benefits for me.
I thought you need to set PBO in the BIOS to take affect after reboot? Doesn’t the ryzen master only work for each session, and those tweaks go away after reboot?
After what I had read about the 5800 it looked the most suitable chip for my needs and it was always my plan to undervolt it. No overclock though. This did indeed improve performance and temps. massively. It stayed boosted throughout a Cinebench R.23 run and temperatures stayed well below expected. I think I also won at the silicon lottery but for this chip it is still a good move. Further I then undervolted my old FX-8350 (which I had been running and have now given away to a friend) and that also improved in temps and performance.
Thanks for putting this up, straight to the point and very informative! I'm just running this option now on my 5600 see what it comes out with ! Thank you and once again great quick easy to follow tutorial ✌️✌️
Easiest guide so far..im doing this on my 5600x as im writing now..will give the feedback on the result..im not that tech savvy knowing how to do things inside bios, but guide like this really helps
I did it like this, but it caused my system to no longer boot. It is a Ryzen 7 7700X on a MSI B650 Mainboard. Be careful with that, even this easy thing might be not that easy in the end. Pulling out the CMOS battery did the trick for me. After putting it back in, I needed several boots to get the system up&running again. So at the moment I'm not sure what to do next...
I've had the same issue with any "simple" adjustments in Ryzen Master (first time owning a ryzen chip set too). I have the Ryzen 9 7900x on a ASUS TUF B650m. Simply put, any adjustment I've tried has caused instability as well as extended to no boot, even trying PBO. Went through the same thing too of having to clear CMOS multiple times.. Am I missing something 🤔
@@bennet1266 You are wasting your time undervolting the 7900 (the non X version). It's already heavily optimized by AMD and they did a great job. You still can squeeze a 2 or 3% stable performance without random crashing , but don't expect lower temps or lower power consumption. IMHO it's just a waste of time with this CPU. Now if you want to overclock to reach the performance of the 7900x (you can get max 95-96 % perf. of the x version), that's another tutorial you want to watch. And of course expect the crazy temps and power draw of the X version as well. At that point the stock cooler can't cope and you need to buy a different one. The 7900 is basically perfect as it is. It's the only version AMD would have released if there wasn't a performance war with Intel. Just my opinion of course based on my tests. In case you are stuck with a machine that won't reboot after crashing, you need to shortcircuit the proper CMOS jumper or remove the battery of the CMOS. Sometimes it won't restart even after resetting the CMOS (just wait 5 minutes before giving up, because some MOBO takes a while to check the DRAM sticks), what I found working in my case was to remove the second stick of RAM , then re-insert it after the first positive booting. Just don't do something really stupid and brick the MOBO 😂😂
Definitely going to try this. Compared to trying to get the max out on am5 Asus board is difficult to say they least. Due to "AI" functions constantly changing things on the background. Including -25 undervolt suddenly no longer working. After fiddling around you -30. Few reboots later etc. And unpredictable unclear boost behavior. Looks like the times bios settings was the tool to get the most out of a CPU are over.
Great guide! I have probably a silly question, but will those values automatically be applied whenever windows boots? Because ryzen Master isn't on autostart and i can't find an option to do so.
For 7800X3D i dont have auto curve tune option.Only manualy i can set and test. I set for all -20mv and work ok. Ryzen master Curve optimizator with autotune only support Ryzen 5000 desktop series and Threadripper PRO 5000WX... this say FAQ for Curve Optimizier.
Just bought a 5800X that i've installed on my "MSI B550-A PRO" motherboard. great guide! Easy to follow and straight to the point which i appreciate. What i don't understand though is. When you press apply at the end does this change the values of the "Curve Optimizer" in the BIOS? If not, do i have to restart Ryzen Master everytime i want these values to take effect? Is it a good idea to let the "Auto Curve Optimizer" do it's thing and then change to these values manually in the BIOS (if the apply-button doesn't affect the BIOS values that is)?/ Thanks in advance!
i don't see the curse optimzer mode on the basic menu, I only see gfx co value. when I go to advance view, I see the curse optimizer mode, but there is no start optimizing button. please help.
Hey, some things i don't understand. at stock in cinebench r24 : 1077 / 78° / 1,48v core VID / 145w i change to PBO all core -20 PTT 120w, result : 1088 / 68° / ~1,25v core VID / 123w but when i play a game like wow my temp is at 69-74° with CPU usage at 15-30% / ~85w / ~ 1,4 core VID. i don't understand why in a R24 bench with all core at 100% for 10mn i get arround 1,25 VID and in a game who don't really use the CPU the temp is bigger and the core VID is arround 1,4v
Love the video mate! Currently doing all cores as I started before stumbling across your video, does it matter too much that I’ve picked that instead??
Will the changes that app made be saved after closing it or shuthing down the pc, or it should be done in every session? Should i put values that app showed in BIOS?
Great video! First time pc builder here. I bought a R7 5700g only to turn around and buy this R9 5900x. Once installed, I had really high idle temps and spikes up in the 80s just by opening a browser window. I went to the basics like thermal paste coverage, cooler position/tuning, updated drivers, BIOS settings, etc. Now I'm optimizing using this method and saw 90c during the process. Hopfeully this is my issue. If not, I have to do more research. Parts: Asus rog strix b550-f wifi ii, R9 5900x, rx7800xt GPU, 64gb 3600mhz, 2x1tb m.2 pcie4, and 850w gold psu.
@@Diego-d5m When I wrote this comment, I went through a bunch of coolers. single tower fan, double tower fan, double tower double fan, 3 fans, and finally landed on an AIO. I bought the Arctic Liquid Freezer 3 280 and it's what I should have bought from the get-go. I ended up undervolting my CPU in the bios and don't run Ryzen Master. Now, I have an average of 45c when running 2 1440p monitors and a basic office workload (word, browsers, Webex phone, outlook, UA-cam podcast). I have idle temps around 32c-25c. I messed around with fan curves and now my PC is super quiet, fast, and fun. I have a preset fan curve for an office load and a gaming load. Playing Starfield at 1440k on ultra settings (average 280 fps) I cruise at 62c to 65c for 2hr+ and still remain quiet.
@@Diego-d5m If you undervolt in the Bios you don't have to run a program to do so. I've always liked to run my PC lean with little to no programs/apps running in the background. So, If the bios is handling the voltage, a PC program won't have to be running in order to undervolt. I set it and forget it.
Hello! About week ago I bought AM5 7700, set up all hardware, OS, and start testing. And here the trouble began. System Start randomly shutdown after working about 20-25 minutes everytime. Because I am beginner, I am installed windows two times, two time rebuild hardware, reputed again termopaste on processor. It doesn't help, I was very sad before watched one video about curve optimiser. I am manually in BIOS set negative -20 for all cores, and system worked one day stable, without shutdown. Now after watching your video, I will try as you showing, and hope it's help. Any advice from you?
Really surprised of how well this worked, did -20 on all cores. Idle temperatures stayed the same at 50 or so but when under load the temps went from 80-90 to around 60👍
best tutorial so far. I've seen a few with everyone tweaking in their bios, a lot of videos I've seen people have manually placed a -30 on "all cores" and some may or may not set a load line limit at a higher variable, or lower variable. I don't know if going directly through bios is better or worse or no difference when setting these undervolts. I'm assuming that when you use Ryzenmaster it auto changes the settings in the bios? will it reflect in the bios if you happen to browse through bios settings? Like how yours says "-21 to -23". Would you see that reflect if you were to manually go to your bios after using Ryzenmaster?
I'm no expert but on my own system this doesn't change the BIOS settings, but it does override them once Windows has booted and Ryzen Master loads in the background. As far as I can see at least for my BIOS I couldn't find a way of setting the voltage per core, only for all cores at once. Ryzen master sets it for each core, and better than that it auto tests each core to see what undervolt it will take. Each core isn't quite made the same, which is why this really helps. Setting a single value in BIOS is basically trial and error, plus voltage has to be set higher so it's set to what your worst core can handle.
I followed this process but during the "Start Optimizing" process, It doesn't remind me to choose between : Continue with existing Offset and Restart with new Offset. It didn't even let me put -30. it just automatically starts optimizing. Am I doing something wrong?
Unfortunately the option to optimize the curve optimizer is missing with my 7950X3D. I set manually -20 all core in bios and left it there for now. On my winter holidays i will try to find some nice per core values :)
Same here for my 7800X3D, no manual or optimise options available, even after a factory reset of my BIOS. I guess the X3D chips are not allowed those options. :( Still, I have managed to get -43 all core in my BIOS. -44 and it's a little unstable. -43 and I can run Cinebench R23 all day, plus an older version of prime95. I know I'm pushing it to the limit, but OCCT and the latest prime95 both crash instantly, but everything else I throw at it works flawlessly. I know some say you can't go below -30 PBO, but my testing says otherwise. Why else would -43 work and -44 not, if it only allow -30? And there is a very clear difference in performance between -43 and the other settings I've tried of -30, -35, -40, and a ridiculous -45 (yeah, that one didn't last long!).
Is that a think with x3d? my 7800x3d doesn't show it either. I thought something was wrong. It just shows under profile, "control mode" options of "eco, default, and auto OC", and under that its MEMORY, "none, or Expo 1". Is there no curve optimizer options through ryzen master and I just do it manually from bios?
@@Snafu2346 There should be a setting for a manual all-core curve optimizer, just like it is in the BIOS, but there isn't the option to allow it to auto optimize the PBO, like the one shown in the video. My guess is that the X3D chips don't get the auto optimizer in Ryzen Master.
@@Darkcyde13 ok, i found the manual one in the advance settings. I only see options for the curve optimizer and I tried -10, -20, and -30 and did a validation test. I only did the test for about 2 minutes at a time, I'll probably set them to test longer. I wonder why the x3d don't have the auto optimizer? I also tried setting it manually in my bios, I don't know if that makes it more reliable, or less than using ryzen master. Right now I'm running -20 on all core. I've used it for the last 10 hours or so and it seems okay, ran some cinebench. I havent' tried gaming yet to see if it remains stable but I assume if it runs cinebench it should be able to runs games as well.
@@Snafu2346 I've read that you should use either Ryzen Master OR do it in BIOS, but don't try to do it in both at the same time. I'm not sure why. Maybe things get mixed up? As it's quite easy in my BIOS (MSI x670E Tomahawk), I have done mine in there and I have not used Ryzen Master software. I did try the RM software when I first experimented with PBO, but it didn't work as well as I wanted it to, so I just reset the software and went back to the BIOS settings method.
done the optimisation but curve optimiser mode is still set to off, how do you change this as it shows everything at -30 when i use advanced view on the curve optimiser tab but says it's off, 5900x
I ran this with exactly your process, per core, but after finishing the test and restart, it shows Curve optimizer control on All core with -30 value. is it normal? I am using R5 5600
thanks for this. I did the BIOS method and it's been very unstable. I'm currently at -18 on all cores and the reason for that is because I started at -30 and have been working my way down. I was getting random reboots when my system was at idle. When looking at Event Viewer it showed errors on certain cores, so I'm assuming those cores weren't receiving enough voltage to operate and be stable. It sucks because at -30 I was getting much lower temps and an all core boost of 4.950ghz. At -18 I'm still getting lower temps, but not as low as I was getting with -30 and in terms of boost it's basically back to stock boost at only 4.5ghz all core. I'm going to give this Ryzen Master method a try and hopefully it performs better. On another note when doing this Ryzen Master method should I go back in the BIOS and reset those settings I changed when i did the BIOS method, back to default? Or will Ryzen Master automatically reset those for me?
Hey quick question here. I used Ryzen Master again on a new desktop i got this year. Running a 5700G. It went perfect, temps dropped 10c this summer! But if im sitting idle in WIndows the pc auto restarts so it became very slightly. Do i have to lower the core values myself or just up the voltage? Where do i up the voltage? Silly question but im not gonna pretend im an expert undervolter having only done it 3 times now so far! 🙂
My 5500 max temp was reduced to 68c from 72c on Cinebench and the score is increased from ~9,6k to ~10,5k Not that much but still good. I also got 29, 29, 29, 29, 23, 28 value.
If the MSI Afterburner's graph keeps the scale(units per division), max temp in Cinebench went down by about 13 degrees for me(it set all cores -30, hasn't restarted once during the evaluation stage)
Oh, another Q. To run Basic View/Curve Optimizer Mode/Per Core/Start Optimizing, it takes my 7700/6700XT 11 Hrs 25 Mins to complete. Can I ask why it takes this long when many YTs suggest it should take under 2 hours with a 5900X and others? The end results showed "-30" for each core. Is it safe to assume I can underclock between 90-150 mV for each of the core of my 7700?
Thank you so much , I got - 10 degrees in games on my 5700x all cores -30 and tested in cinebench 23 whit an end result of 15670 points on multi core 😁😁😁 . Peace
glad i found this. my 5800x feels wierd. Hits above 90 (with a tower 212 style cooler) has 1.488v, and despite being a "4.8ghz boost" cpu, 1 core was hitting 5.5ghz out the box without changing any bios or ryzen master stuff??
best undercoat/overclok is to let the bios with pbo..and all the other options as default/auto. Tried your advice and others from UA-cam. Test on Ryzen master passed, but in games pc is restarting
This is exactly the case. Not strange at all. Undervolting will most likely cause problems at idle not during stressful tasks. So, if you’re experiencing this that means you need to adjust one or all of your cores. Most likely it’s the most efficient or the second. But it could be any of you’re being aggressive with the curve. Test it
I have two questions.. 1. Will the curve optimiser settings done by the ryzen master will get reset everytime after system or pc reboot?? 2. What if i do the process shown in this vdo & then copy the same curve optimiser settings directly in the bios?? Then i think I sudnt need the ryzen master to be installed & eat some resources in the background..
Should i try increasing the offset derivation since it set -30 on all cores after this process? Will it count from the new values or from the default now?
After you optimize the cores, do you have to start Ryzen Master each time you boot up for the settings to kick in, or does it do that automatically when you boot up? Right now, I have my Ryzen 9 5900X undervolted in the BIOS by -0.1V and overclock limited to a max of 4000 MHz. I get a Cinebench R23 score of 19,829.
if you click Apply from Ryzen Master after it finds the optimization, it will apply it to the bios once it restarts so it's not needed to start ryzen master each time
@@matteo0196 my Control Mode is Default. I click on Start Optimizing after I select Per Core. I get the message, "System should be in other than Manual control mode to start optimizing!!" I think I have to go into my BIOS and reset the the voltage offset and CPU ratio back to default first. I'll do that tomorrow.
@@SteezinBreezin I changed the settings to 45 on the CPU Core Ratio and took off the undervolting. I'm getting over 22K on Cinebench and getting decent temperatures (55 - 64 degC) playing Halo Infinite. I don't like running my CPUs at full speed because it burns them out sooner.
Hi thanks for the guide. One question here: I am currently running curve optimizer and the system has crashed several times so far. Is that normal? The optimizer is resuming after the restart and it seems fine. I am just a bit scared :D
@FutureProof TechTalk I'm confused, I took the test and 5 minutes before the end I went to the toilet and when I came back my PC restarted. AMD Ryzen Master did not start automatically either. When I then did an R23 Cinebench test, it was 10°C less than before undervolting. But now when I want to start AMD Ryzen Master, my PC crashes and restarts itself. I have a RYZEN 7 5700G
Will try this on 7800x3d which tends to overheat even with the frikkin' 420mm AIO liquid cooler installed. The cpu is so finnicky you have to manually set the ram timings for it to even work (I get blue screen if using EXPO).
Interesting. I have 7800x3d with pbo and expo with 360 aio. No undervolt done yet. Idle avarage around 33-36 degrees. Games on 1440p max would avarage around 43 degrees. Full load r23 after 10-20 min run maximum is 78 degrees. Does not go above that. R23 avarage score is around 18400.
@@tertiusdykes3529 Mine is idle at around 60 degrees. Could you please help me with the settings to lower the temps. I am running the processor on B650E-F motherboard
My r5 7600 was running at 4.7mhz at idle and was getting very hot like 70°c (yes I think that's hot enough) But the msi center was showing cpu usage is 10%...(this is my first day of using a gaming pc so I'm scared af)....now I've started the process and it's going to run for next 1hr... I'm praying right now 🥲
Can you use this while using the auto overclocking functionality at +200 mhz, or willt his cause instability's if you combine auto oc with the undervolting?
I ran a cinebench earlier tonight that was damn near melting my chip reading 90c most of the time until i pointed a big fan at the back of the computer. I figure I need to undervolt cause I'm just using air to cool and idk what else i'd do to cool it. i'm not gunna do a water cooling system 0.0
Hello 👋🏼 When I use ryzen master to aplly changes, the computer crashes, the only way I have is to set it directly in the bios… so I put an all core undervolting (-22 best perf on R23) beacause I dont know the good value of each core… any solution ?
Ryzen Master optimising program test each core to find the lowest stable value. It's perfectly fine to set manually the same little less optimised value for each core. For example my cpu can't be optimized automatically by ryzen master. I started with -10 on all core and did a stress test before lowering the value by -5. I repeated this until i found the right stable value. For me this is -25. If the automatic way was available, perhaps RM would have found -27 -25 -27 -26 and so on, but frankly it does not make much difference
Have watched so many videos on this, and this was the easiest one to follow. Straight to the point with 0 bollocks inbetween. Thank you!
Seen that you liked my post. So thought it would be right to let you know that it worked perfectly On my 5600x. Tested with OCCT linpak for an hour, and idle on desktop for an hour. Also gained 200 points on timespy CPU score.
I downloaded Ryzen Master a few days ago. Didn't bother with it because I refused to believe the undervolting process could be this simple. It was. Thanks!
This worked for me. Thank you so much. My processor was getting into 90c and it was scaring me now it's much cooler in the 60's and 70's thanks so much
when you began optimizing was your cpu temp averaging at a high amount?
@@ihyaiko5542 Yeah When you Start the Optimizer the Temps Go Upto 85C for me With an AIO.
@@ihyaiko5542 yeah it does because the system is pushing its limits untill its unstable, perfectly normal
W latach 90's? 😅
@@spikeweb5193 lol
one of the best guides i have ever seen in my life, went from 80 on load to 66-68 with more stable performance on stock cooler 5 5600. thank you so much
i did this too but now my cpu won’t go above 3ghz did. it do that for you?
@@ryano6071 Did you ever fix this? I have a 5600 and i kinda wanna do this, ive never done something like this before.
@@sylviorapuano2688 yes i was able to fix it have you tried using pbo?
@@sylviorapuano2688 you can always reverse all this either in the ryzen master itself or in the bios
@@ryano6071 hope you managed to reverse/fix it because losing 1-1.5ghz clock isnt too great ;D
This video has the most added value of all the ones I've seen on YT so far. This is really incredible, performance is top and the temperatures are down, feels like a new system. Thank you for that. R7 5800X on X470 👍🤩
I used the exact method in this video, and voila! You're the man! Wish I found this earlier. My system is now running at the lowest possible temperatures. Not to mention the significant boost in performance.
Ryzen 9 5900x
Aorus Elite B550m
Noctua nh d15.
Thanks man. Subbed and liked.
I got +20% average fps boost with these settings on MSI x570 Tomahawk / R7 5700X . PPT/TDC/EDC set in BIOS to +200 (saw in some video that state those values just to max it out) same values reflected in Ryzen Master. Then Boost Override is set to 100. PBO Sclar is set to off. Curve optimizer-per core and after test it set all cores to -30. Control Mode is set to Auto Overclocking. So shortly its curve optimizer / per core all -30 / Auto Overclocking. No issues in games, temps are less 7-10 degree under load. On liquid 120mm ID-Cooling. Max temp in this OC mode under load reach 78C. Room temp 26C.
I’m pretty amazed how well Curve Optimiser worked.. here my results with Cinebench r23
Stock:
score 15025, 82,4 celsius, pulling 94,3W.
With CO - per core:
Score 15848, 67,2 celsius, pulling now 72,2W.
More then 20% of power reduction and 15 degrees cooler!
Thank you so much for this. I wasn't even aware that Ryzen Master had the auto curve optimizer. I'd been struggling with stability when trying All-Core offsets, but never had the time nor the inclination to dial in per-core in BIOS. Now I ran it through RM and took a note of the values. Then I went into BIOS and input those values into the curve optimizer. Now it's permanent. Thanks again!
One of the most precise videos I have ever watched! All other videos I have watched has so much BS in it that I can't understand it so you have definitely simplified everything. I'm running to Optimizer right now and hopefully everything will work.
Clear, concise guide - thank you! I had previously adjusted my 5900X All Core PBO in BIOS (-25), but ran this per-core optimization to see what it came up with. All cores are now individually set to -29. 6.3% increase in Cinebench R23 score over stock, and I've seen the CPU clock at 4.8GHz during Unigine Heaven benchmark - all at the same power. Temps in high 70s still bug me, but this is a Corsair a200 and despite the dedicated, custom AIO I'm not sure the single case fan is moving enough air through its radiator to do much better. Once my warranty runs out maybe I'll try re-pasting.
i have read another guy owning the 5900x and he got 77C max as well and very stable computer. He did set the PPT , TDC and EDC to reduced values, and set -25 like you did in core #0 to #5 and on core #6-#11 he did set -30, as the 5900 is built on 2 chiplets. Also you should use Artic mx-6 paste, which seems the best with 20% improvement. also you need a case with good airflow. The Cooler Master MA824 AM5/AM4 seems the best to air cool even the 7950x3d series. it beats Noctua D15. it is massive with 8 pipes. I plan to buy the 5900x soon, i will see if i get the same result. But i will try with my current cooler first, the Cooler Master hyper 212 evo AM4 with 4 pipes only. another great cooler and maybe the best could be the Artic Freezer AIO 420mm which provide the lowest temp, but the MA824 is an air cooler so it require less management than AIO.
@@CC-gt3ro Thanks for the reply. The a200 is a custom pre-built, small footprint ITX tower, so changing cases or coolers really isn't an option. It has two custom AIOs - one on each side of the case, and a fan at the top ventilates both. Works fine as long as the fan is responding to temp. I think the real problem with Corsair's design is that the sensor that controls the only fan in the system (a 140 in the 'roof' of the case) is on the MOBO - it's not actually looking at CPU or GPU temp. For example, while downloading a new game, the CPU will go into thermal limit before the fan speed starts increasing. This is a bit odd, IMHO. I'll leave it be as long as it's in warranty. My original a200 purchase had to be replaced due to pump failure - this one was shipped in Jan of this year but warranty still runs out in 6 mos. When it does, in addition to maybe re-pasting, I'll start experimenting with things like uninstalling iCue and using Fan Control instead, which can trigger fan adjustment based on any combination of temps. It's a great little system, but thermals are notoriously sub-par. It's basically a tradeoff for the awesome (IMHO) form-factor.
Has it been pretty simple since you last did this? Have you been running the same settings since you last posted?
I was curious to do it in bios, but I might do it under Ryzenmaster, I don't know if doing it is Ryzen master vs doing in bios makes any difference if one is more reliable than the other? I've heard some says its the same, and others swear that Ryzenmaster is bad.
🤷
@@Snafu2346 Remained stable for as long as I used the system. I built a new custom game system and the a200 has been sitting on my bench, idle, since then. So, although I can say it ran great with these Ryzen Master settings for as long as I used it, I'm not currently running that PC today. FWIW...
temps in the 70s at full are totally healthy
Did a per core auto optimization on a 5600 and went from 77W / 68C to 44W / 55C at 100% utilization on a $14 92mm budget cooler. This was with a conservative -20 step (baseline is -30 at start) initial undervolt. Crazy efficiency.
How much time did it take?
Thanks!
best ryzen master guide on youtube, no one else talks about optimizer per core, it's always "all cores". For my new 7600X, I got -28 on all cores except 2 had -26.
I got -30 to all my cores ryzen 5700X and -15C temperature, great vid!
you have a good chip then the highest mine allowed was -19 on the best core and 2 other cores the rest are -15 and -17
hows performance change?
@@alfa-psi 1 year after 100% stable
Thank you!! I've been looking for a way to get this done on my 5800x and you just explained it in the best way possible!
Best Video on the use of Ryzen Masters Curve Optimizer Function in Simple View... Well Done Sir! Cape Cod, MA USA
Thank you so much for your video. First time I see an auto overclock/undervolt feature for CPU so useful like that.
ive never done something like this before. Im currently running a 5600 and some games it his 85c and im using the Prism Cooler from the 2700x. How did it go for you? Im nervous that it will break my system if it fails or something, and i dont know how i would get it back to normal or whatever
@@sylviorapuano2688 It undervolts the CPU the CPU will run colder so even less chance to break and more performance cuz it will run at higher clock due to its low temperature.
Love this video! I recently purchased the 7950X and also the X 3D I went with the X3D to save on power consumption however I did not like the noise that it was about the same as the X variant so I decided to go back with the original 7950 X and followed your guide to optimizing with RM work great ! Other video on UA-cam about RM makes it so complicated for beginners we don't wanna be overwhelmed we just wanna get our systems quiet and run efficiently without losing much performance :)
Did it today on my Ryzen 5900X. Thanks for easy explain how to undervolt.
Thanks a lot for this. Out of the box my board was trying to shove 1.4v continuous into the chip when I set it up.
The problem with curve optimisation is that it does not change the actual curve itself. It merely "drags" the existing curve left along the (x, voltage) axis if applying a negative offset or right if applying a positive offset. This can and often results in a perfectly stable machine when run flat out but an unstable machine when the workload is light, since the offset which might be perfectly fine at 1.2 volts is not fine at, say 0.5 volts, especially since the lower the voltage, the higher the relative undervolt. The only way to truly test a curve offset is prolonged use of the machine at varying workloads using the real world applications the machine was built for. A good test for curve optimisation is the Serious Sam Fusion benchmark mode since unstable curve optimisation at lower voltages will almost always result in a screen freeze during a cut scene or when returning to the menu after the benchmark is run. Bottom line is that to be honest, the Ryzen Master automated curve optimisation is largely useless for real world usage and merely shows what voltages the CPU requires to run stable when flat out.
Happened to have the same cpu as you had in this video, was surprised it ran so hot. Did the Curve Optimizer and it really helped, especially during editing with Adobe Premiere Pro the CPU had to tendency to suddenly increase it's power. Now no longer!
5600X In BIOS, I first adjusted all the Load line calibration settings, mode 2 on power delivery, restarted, then I applied XMP on the ram, restarted, then I activated manual PBO. I went into advanced settings, selected the Optimizer tab, clicked on the bottom right corner on the button that says "Copy current" to copy my bios settings onto Ryzen Master. Then I clicked the "per core option" and then "Optimize".
Here's the thing, during the test cycle you can see Ryzen master do a multicore test, during this test take note of the PBO values that are not reaching 99-100%, for example, PPT at 40%, EDC at 80% TDC 99%. In order to see real results you have to first adjust the PBO values so that they are all at 99-100% at max load. This apparently affects it's efficiency. So if you get 80% load on the TDC at 100, you have to lower the TDC to 80-81, oddly enough, when you do this, temps increase and max peak speeds do to. Increase the PPT while keeping the TDC and EDC balanced at max tilt until temps are around 84-87 Celsius. For me it was PPT 120, TDC 80, EDC 95. THEN I ran the optimized, it then cycled through each core and after 50 minutes yielded the most efficient per core settings possible. I boost up to 4850 single core and 4720 multicore with temps below 87 celsius. Almost all the cores can boost up to and above 4800 on single core loads. After that you can mess around with the Scalar but It didn't really yield and benefits for me.
I didn't have that basic version, just advanced on my 5800X3D... I just use PBO inside my motherboard bios (Asus TUF x570) to -30 and work good ;)
I thought you need to set PBO in the BIOS to take affect after reboot? Doesn’t the ryzen master only work for each session, and those tweaks go away after reboot?
No curve optimizer on basic view for 7800x3d
did you find any solution ?
@Math1eu- manual from bios. But you have to test which takes a long time. Just activate pbo and that's it. 10fps less no difference
press FN + #2 to go into advanced view
Great video my ryzen 9 5900x is running with lower temp and stable no more fans ramping up 🙏
After what I had read about the 5800 it looked the most suitable chip for my needs and it was always my plan to undervolt it. No overclock though.
This did indeed improve performance and temps. massively. It stayed boosted throughout a Cinebench R.23 run and temperatures stayed well below expected.
I think I also won at the silicon lottery but for this chip it is still a good move.
Further I then undervolted my old FX-8350 (which I had been running and have now given away to a friend) and that also improved in temps and performance.
Thanks for putting this up, straight to the point and very informative! I'm just running this option now on my 5600 see what it comes out with ! Thank you and once again great quick easy to follow tutorial ✌️✌️
What did you get?
I have the same cpu what did you get?
So I have a 5600x. Took most of the day to run this on individual cores. Got better cinebench scores than similar systems.
Works very well on the Zen 4 series too. I opted to set this through the UEFA though, since I run a dual boot (Win/Linux).
Can’t wait to try this out, thanks!
i just got my 7800x3d and don't even have those options in ryzen master. is it not supported ?
Thank you. Dropping the temperature by 10 degrees is great.
Thx for the video. The software is a little bit scary but now im ok with using it
Easiest guide so far..im doing this on my 5600x as im writing now..will give the feedback on the result..im not that tech savvy knowing how to do things inside bios, but guide like this really helps
Amd ryzen 5 5600??? Did this very del help you
Video* help you ?
@@grim_2k861hey I am doing the test on my R5 5600x, will let you know about my results
@@grim_2k861 his pc probably exploded 6 months no reply :))
So this is basically undervolting for beginners? Then doing it in bios is for when you get more comfortable?
I did it like this, but it caused my system to no longer boot. It is a Ryzen 7 7700X on a MSI B650 Mainboard. Be careful with that, even this easy thing might be not that easy in the end.
Pulling out the CMOS battery did the trick for me. After putting it back in, I needed several boots to get the system up&running again. So at the moment I'm not sure what to do next...
I've had the same issue with any "simple" adjustments in Ryzen Master (first time owning a ryzen chip set too). I have the Ryzen 9 7900x on a ASUS TUF B650m. Simply put, any adjustment I've tried has caused instability as well as extended to no boot, even trying PBO. Went through the same thing too of having to clear CMOS multiple times.. Am I missing something 🤔
Thanks for letting know the CMOS trick. I will try to optimize my 7700x and will let you know if I have the same results.
Did you guys find a solution, did the curve optimisation with my 7900 and it had the same problem
@@bennet1266 You are wasting your time undervolting the 7900 (the non X version). It's already heavily optimized by AMD and they did a great job. You still can squeeze a 2 or 3% stable performance without random crashing , but don't expect lower temps or lower power consumption. IMHO it's just a waste of time with this CPU. Now if you want to overclock to reach the performance of the 7900x (you can get max 95-96 % perf. of the x version), that's another tutorial you want to watch. And of course expect the crazy temps and power draw of the X version as well. At that point the stock cooler can't cope and you need to buy a different one.
The 7900 is basically perfect as it is. It's the only version AMD would have released if there wasn't a performance war with Intel.
Just my opinion of course based on my tests.
In case you are stuck with a machine that won't reboot after crashing, you need to shortcircuit the proper CMOS jumper or remove the battery of the CMOS. Sometimes it won't restart even after resetting the CMOS (just wait 5 minutes before giving up, because some MOBO takes a while to check the DRAM sticks), what I found working in my case was to remove the second stick of RAM , then re-insert it after the first positive booting.
Just don't do something really stupid and brick the MOBO 😂😂
Definitely going to try this. Compared to trying to get the max out on am5 Asus board is difficult to say they least. Due to "AI" functions constantly changing things on the background. Including -25 undervolt suddenly no longer working. After fiddling around you -30. Few reboots later etc. And unpredictable unclear boost behavior. Looks like the times bios settings was the tool to get the most out of a CPU are over.
Ryzen 7 7700 non X worked like a charm thanks :)
still working well? Any crashes or anything of that sorts? have the same setup as you. thanks
Wow, who would’ve thought the company that makes the processor also knows how to optimize it?
Great guide! I have probably a silly question, but will those values automatically be applied whenever windows boots? Because ryzen Master isn't on autostart and i can't find an option to do so.
Wow this is epic! Thank you 🇮🇪
Thank you. This is great.... Should I go to advance and to the curve per core with precision boost?
For 7800X3D i dont have auto curve tune option.Only manualy i can set and test. I set for all -20mv and work ok. Ryzen master Curve optimizator with autotune only support Ryzen 5000 desktop series and Threadripper PRO 5000WX... this say FAQ for Curve Optimizier.
I have this processor and i set ONLY auto overclock and my PC to restart and no image now 😨😅 i dont understand why
As great as simple guide. Subscribed.
Just bought a 5800X that i've installed on my "MSI B550-A PRO" motherboard. great guide! Easy to follow and straight to the point which i appreciate. What i don't understand though is.
When you press apply at the end does this change the values of the "Curve Optimizer" in the BIOS? If not, do i have to restart Ryzen Master everytime i want these values to take effect? Is it a good idea to let the "Auto Curve Optimizer" do it's thing and then change to these values manually in the BIOS (if the apply-button doesn't affect the BIOS values that is)?/ Thanks in advance!
It will change the bios settings so no need to start ryzen every time
Thanks! This was exactly what i was looking for in neat short package.
Thank's for the tip, that looks killer!
60+ degres on idle?what cooler you have??
i don't see the curse optimzer mode on the basic menu, I only see gfx co value. when I go to advance view, I see the curse optimizer mode, but there is no start optimizing button. please help.
same problem
Hey,
some things i don't understand. at stock in cinebench r24 : 1077 / 78° / 1,48v core VID / 145w i change to PBO all core -20 PTT 120w, result : 1088 / 68° / ~1,25v core VID / 123w
but when i play a game like wow my temp is at 69-74° with CPU usage at 15-30% / ~85w / ~ 1,4 core VID.
i don't understand why in a R24 bench with all core at 100% for 10mn i get arround 1,25 VID and in a game who don't really use the CPU the temp is bigger and the core VID is arround 1,4v
Love the video mate! Currently doing all cores as I started before stumbling across your video, does it matter too much that I’ve picked that instead??
Will the changes that app made be saved after closing it or shuthing down the pc, or it should be done in every session? Should i put values that app showed in BIOS?
Great video! First time pc builder here. I bought a R7 5700g only to turn around and buy this R9 5900x. Once installed, I had really high idle temps and spikes up in the 80s just by opening a browser window. I went to the basics like thermal paste coverage, cooler position/tuning, updated drivers, BIOS settings, etc. Now I'm optimizing using this method and saw 90c during the process. Hopfeully this is my issue. If not, I have to do more research. Parts: Asus rog strix b550-f wifi ii, R9 5900x, rx7800xt GPU, 64gb 3600mhz, 2x1tb m.2 pcie4, and 850w gold psu.
it worked?
@@Diego-d5m When I wrote this comment, I went through a bunch of coolers. single tower fan, double tower fan, double tower double fan, 3 fans, and finally landed on an AIO. I bought the Arctic Liquid Freezer 3 280 and it's what I should have bought from the get-go. I ended up undervolting my CPU in the bios and don't run Ryzen Master. Now, I have an average of 45c when running 2 1440p monitors and a basic office workload (word, browsers, Webex phone, outlook, UA-cam podcast). I have idle temps around 32c-25c. I messed around with fan curves and now my PC is super quiet, fast, and fun. I have a preset fan curve for an office load and a gaming load. Playing Starfield at 1440k on ultra settings (average 280 fps) I cruise at 62c to 65c for 2hr+ and still remain quiet.
@@BOBFudge Thats great! I also have a AIO 240mm. Why you did the undervolting in the bios and not with ryzen master? thank you for your answer.
@@Diego-d5m If you undervolt in the Bios you don't have to run a program to do so. I've always liked to run my PC lean with little to no programs/apps running in the background. So, If the bios is handling the voltage, a PC program won't have to be running in order to undervolt. I set it and forget it.
Hello! About week ago I bought AM5 7700, set up all hardware, OS, and start testing. And here the trouble began. System Start randomly shutdown after working about 20-25 minutes everytime. Because I am beginner, I am installed windows two times, two time rebuild hardware, reputed again termopaste on processor. It doesn't help, I was very sad before watched one video about curve optimiser. I am manually in BIOS set negative -20 for all cores, and system worked one day stable, without shutdown. Now after watching your video, I will try as you showing, and hope it's help. Any advice from you?
Really surprised of how well this worked, did -20 on all cores. Idle temperatures stayed the same at 50 or so but when under load the temps went from 80-90 to around 60👍
🎉 helpful video. i have a question sir. My mainboard don’t allow OC cpu in Bios. Can i do undervolt in This app ? hope u reply me soon
best tutorial so far. I've seen a few with everyone tweaking in their bios, a lot of videos I've seen people have manually placed a -30 on "all cores" and some may or may not set a load line limit at a higher variable, or lower variable.
I don't know if going directly through bios is better or worse or no difference when setting these undervolts.
I'm assuming that when you use Ryzenmaster it auto changes the settings in the bios? will it reflect in the bios if you happen to browse through bios settings? Like how yours says "-21 to -23". Would you see that reflect if you were to manually go to your bios after using Ryzenmaster?
I'm no expert but on my own system this doesn't change the BIOS settings, but it does override them once Windows has booted and Ryzen Master loads in the background. As far as I can see at least for my BIOS I couldn't find a way of setting the voltage per core, only for all cores at once. Ryzen master sets it for each core, and better than that it auto tests each core to see what undervolt it will take. Each core isn't quite made the same, which is why this really helps. Setting a single value in BIOS is basically trial and error, plus voltage has to be set higher so it's set to what your worst core can handle.
Thank you! It was just that easy, lower temps and increase in fps. Do I need to apply it in Ryzen Master app every time I boot up my?
No need, ryzen master will apply automatically. You might have to check if values still there if you ever update the software
Works great so far, thanks man
I followed this process but during the "Start Optimizing" process, It doesn't remind me to choose between : Continue with existing Offset and Restart with new Offset. It didn't even let me put -30. it just automatically starts optimizing.
Am I doing something wrong?
Unfortunately the option to optimize the curve optimizer is missing with my 7950X3D. I set manually -20 all core in bios and left it there for now. On my winter holidays i will try to find some nice per core values :)
Same here for my 7800X3D, no manual or optimise options available, even after a factory reset of my BIOS. I guess the X3D chips are not allowed those options. :(
Still, I have managed to get -43 all core in my BIOS. -44 and it's a little unstable. -43 and I can run Cinebench R23 all day, plus an older version of prime95. I know I'm pushing it to the limit, but OCCT and the latest prime95 both crash instantly, but everything else I throw at it works flawlessly. I know some say you can't go below -30 PBO, but my testing says otherwise. Why else would -43 work and -44 not, if it only allow -30? And there is a very clear difference in performance between -43 and the other settings I've tried of -30, -35, -40, and a ridiculous -45 (yeah, that one didn't last long!).
Is that a think with x3d? my 7800x3d doesn't show it either. I thought something was wrong. It just shows under profile, "control mode" options of "eco, default, and auto OC", and under that its MEMORY, "none, or Expo 1". Is there no curve optimizer options through ryzen master and I just do it manually from bios?
@@Snafu2346 There should be a setting for a manual all-core curve optimizer, just like it is in the BIOS, but there isn't the option to allow it to auto optimize the PBO, like the one shown in the video. My guess is that the X3D chips don't get the auto optimizer in Ryzen Master.
@@Darkcyde13 ok, i found the manual one in the advance settings. I only see options for the curve optimizer and I tried -10, -20, and -30 and did a validation test. I only did the test for about 2 minutes at a time, I'll probably set them to test longer.
I wonder why the x3d don't have the auto optimizer?
I also tried setting it manually in my bios, I don't know if that makes it more reliable, or less than using ryzen master.
Right now I'm running -20 on all core. I've used it for the last 10 hours or so and it seems okay, ran some cinebench. I havent' tried gaming yet to see if it remains stable but I assume if it runs cinebench it should be able to runs games as well.
@@Snafu2346 I've read that you should use either Ryzen Master OR do it in BIOS, but don't try to do it in both at the same time. I'm not sure why. Maybe things get mixed up?
As it's quite easy in my BIOS (MSI x670E Tomahawk), I have done mine in there and I have not used Ryzen Master software.
I did try the RM software when I first experimented with PBO, but it didn't work as well as I wanted it to, so I just reset the software and went back to the BIOS settings method.
this has made a world of difference to my temps and performance, do I need to open the program and click apply every time I reboot pc? thanks
did you find out if you have to apply after reboot?
@@racequad9 it's persistent, don't know if it stays in bios after a reformat of the drive but i've restarted windows lots and it stays
Thank you for an easy to follow tutorial.
Will I gain anything with my 7900x by doing this?.
All depends if you’re struggling with high temps. Main reason it’s worth doing. If all is fine they no real need
Thanks so much for that, excellent class
done the optimisation but curve optimiser mode is still set to off, how do you change this as it shows everything at -30 when i use advanced view on the curve optimiser tab but says it's off, 5900x
same. did you find a fix by chance?
I ran this with exactly your process, per core, but after finishing the test and restart, it shows Curve optimizer control on All core with -30 value. is it normal? I am using R5 5600
ever fix this it happened to me as well?
thanks for this. I did the BIOS method and it's been very unstable. I'm currently at -18 on all cores and the reason for that is because I started at -30 and have been working my way down. I was getting random reboots when my system was at idle. When looking at Event Viewer it showed errors on certain cores, so I'm assuming those cores weren't receiving enough voltage to operate and be stable. It sucks because at -30 I was getting much lower temps and an all core boost of 4.950ghz. At -18 I'm still getting lower temps, but not as low as I was getting with -30 and in terms of boost it's basically back to stock boost at only 4.5ghz all core. I'm going to give this Ryzen Master method a try and hopefully it performs better.
On another note when doing this Ryzen Master method should I go back in the BIOS and reset those settings I changed when i did the BIOS method, back to default? Or will Ryzen Master automatically reset those for me?
I would reset the bios before starting so it’s a clean slate
Are those values changed on the BIOS? Or do I need to load ryzen master every time?
They are.
Hey quick question here.
I used Ryzen Master again on a new desktop i got this year.
Running a 5700G.
It went perfect, temps dropped 10c this summer! But if im sitting idle in WIndows the pc auto restarts so it became very slightly.
Do i have to lower the core values myself or just up the voltage? Where do i up the voltage?
Silly question but im not gonna pretend im an expert undervolter having only done it 3 times now so far! 🙂
My 5500 max temp was reduced to 68c from 72c on Cinebench and the score is increased from ~9,6k to ~10,5k Not that much but still good.
I also got 29, 29, 29, 29, 23, 28 value.
A fellow 5500 user lets go
This improve performance ?
If the MSI Afterburner's graph keeps the scale(units per division), max temp in Cinebench went down by about 13 degrees for me(it set all cores -30, hasn't restarted once during the evaluation stage)
do I have to keep ryzen master always open for those settings to apply or it saves the changes on the bios?
Na bro, he’s mentioned it in the description that you don’t need to 👍
Oh, another Q.
To run Basic View/Curve Optimizer Mode/Per Core/Start Optimizing, it takes my 7700/6700XT 11 Hrs 25 Mins to complete.
Can I ask why it takes this long when many YTs suggest it should take under 2 hours with a 5900X and others?
The end results showed "-30" for each core.
Is it safe to assume I can underclock between 90-150 mV for each of the core of my 7700?
Thank you so much , I got - 10 degrees in games on my 5700x all cores -30 and tested in cinebench 23 whit an end result of 15670 points on multi core 😁😁😁 . Peace
My pc restart when it goes 99% per core thing, after it restarts nothing pops up and when i try to open it again it just restarts to 0
Use it for testing, uninstall it and set those values in the UEFI. You don't need the app, other than not having to restart your PC all the time.
Can you educate a newbie?
Can I run MSI Afterburner, AMD Adrenalin and this SW (Ryzen Master) at the same time or choose only one as they might clash?
Do you know if this works with Ryzen 1600 and also if the program ClockTuner for Ryzen is any better? Thanks, great guide
glad i found this. my 5800x feels wierd. Hits above 90 (with a tower 212 style cooler) has 1.488v, and despite being a "4.8ghz boost" cpu, 1 core was hitting 5.5ghz out the box without changing any bios or ryzen master stuff??
best undercoat/overclok is to let the bios with pbo..and all the other options as default/auto. Tried your advice and others from UA-cam. Test on Ryzen master passed, but in games pc is restarting
For me the ryzen master settings are not stable. Strangely enough it is stable while benchmarking, but not in idle
This is exactly the case. Not strange at all. Undervolting will most likely cause problems at idle not during stressful tasks. So, if you’re experiencing this that means you need to adjust one or all of your cores. Most likely it’s the most efficient or the second. But it could be any of you’re being aggressive with the curve. Test it
I have two questions..
1. Will the curve optimiser settings done by the ryzen master will get reset everytime after system or pc reboot??
2. What if i do the process shown in this vdo & then copy the same curve optimiser settings directly in the bios?? Then i think I sudnt need the ryzen master to be installed & eat some resources in the background..
will this be okay with the 580x3d as well you think? ive had stability issues in the past with ryzen master
Should i try increasing the offset derivation since it set -30 on all cores after this process? Will it count from the new values or from the default now?
After you optimize the cores, do you have to start Ryzen Master each time you boot up for the settings to kick in, or does it do that automatically when you boot up? Right now, I have my Ryzen 9 5900X undervolted in the BIOS by -0.1V and overclock limited to a max of 4000 MHz. I get a Cinebench R23 score of 19,829.
if you click Apply from Ryzen Master after it finds the optimization, it will apply it to the bios once it restarts so it's not needed to start ryzen master each time
@@matteo0196 my Control Mode is Default. I click on Start Optimizing after I select Per Core. I get the message, "System should be in other than Manual control mode to start optimizing!!" I think I have to go into my BIOS and reset the the voltage offset and CPU ratio back to default first. I'll do that tomorrow.
You’re really limiting the 5900x. The chip can hit upwards of
23k on Cinebench. Mines hit 23.8k locking at 4.6GHz.
@@SteezinBreezin I changed the settings to 45 on the CPU Core Ratio and took off the undervolting. I'm getting over 22K on Cinebench and getting decent temperatures (55 - 64 degC) playing Halo Infinite. I don't like running my CPUs at full speed because it burns them out sooner.
@@l.i.archer5379no, just go ryzen master, go advanced view, go curve optimizer and set It to manual and thats all
Hi,just finished watching your video and i was wondering if this is PBO2 undervolting? thanks
Does it run automatically after turning on the computer? I have set it but when I restart the computer, the software does not run automatically.
Hi thanks for the guide. One question here: I am currently running curve optimizer and the system has crashed several times so far. Is that normal? The optimizer is resuming after the restart and it seems fine. I am just a bit scared :D
this happend to me i reverted to default no issues since
do i need to disable expo for this as well?
Does it lower idle temp too? What is your idle temp after applying this?
@FutureProof TechTalk I'm confused, I took the test and 5 minutes before the end I went to the toilet and when I came back my PC restarted. AMD Ryzen Master did not start automatically either. When I then did an R23 Cinebench test, it was 10°C less than before undervolting. But now when I want to start AMD Ryzen Master, my PC crashes and restarts itself. I have a RYZEN 7 5700G
Can I use other apps while Per Core optimization is running or will it affect the final figures in a detrimental way ?
Will try this on 7800x3d which tends to overheat even with the frikkin'
420mm AIO liquid cooler installed. The cpu is so finnicky you have to manually set the ram timings for it to even work (I get blue screen if using EXPO).
What kind of temps are you getting under load
Interesting. I have 7800x3d with pbo and expo with 360 aio. No undervolt done yet. Idle avarage around 33-36 degrees. Games on 1440p max would avarage around 43 degrees. Full load r23 after 10-20 min run maximum is 78 degrees. Does not go above that. R23 avarage score is around 18400.
My 7800x3d sp 92 can run 6600 cl30 ram custom timings and subtimings. First cpu with 85sp couldnt even boot 6400.
@@tertiusdykes3529 Mine is idle at around 60 degrees. Could you please help me with the settings to lower the temps. I am running the processor on B650E-F motherboard
@@Eusebiugh Your 7800x3d does not run 6600. Come on man.
My r5 7600 was running at 4.7mhz at idle and was getting very hot like 70°c (yes I think that's hot enough)
But the msi center was showing cpu usage is 10%...(this is my first day of using a gaming pc so I'm scared af)....now I've started the process and it's going to run for next 1hr... I'm praying right now 🥲
how’d it go?
How you doing now hope works for you 😅????
Need an update for this. The button for start optimize is not there.
Have B650 TOMAHAWK and 7800x3d
Have you found any solution to this???
@@aety_aeterna no unfortunately 😔
Can you use this while using the auto overclocking functionality at +200 mhz, or willt his cause instability's if you combine auto oc with the undervolting?
I ran a cinebench earlier tonight that was damn near melting my chip reading 90c most of the time until i pointed a big fan at the back of the computer.
I figure I need to undervolt cause I'm just using air to cool and idk what else i'd do to cool it. i'm not gunna do a water cooling system 0.0
Hello 👋🏼
When I use ryzen master to aplly changes, the computer crashes, the only way I have is to set it directly in the bios… so I put an all core undervolting (-22 best perf on R23) beacause I dont know the good value of each core… any solution ?
Ryzen Master optimising program test each core to find the lowest stable value. It's perfectly fine to set manually the same little less optimised value for each core. For example my cpu can't be optimized automatically by ryzen master. I started with -10 on all core and did a stress test before lowering the value by -5. I repeated this until i found the right stable value. For me this is -25. If the automatic way was available, perhaps RM would have found -27 -25 -27 -26 and so on, but frankly it does not make much difference