Overclocking Broadwell

For any user that has overclocked an Intel processor since Sandy Bridge, there is not much new to see here. Overclocking, for those unfamiliar with the term, means adjusting the settings of the system to make a component run faster, typically outside its specifications and at the expense of power but with the benefit of a faster system.

There's is a large community around overclocking, with motherboard manufacturers giving special options to make overclocking easier, as well as bigger and better CPU coolers to move the extra heat generated away from the processor faster to keep it cool. Some users use liquid cooling, either prebuilt arrangements or custom designs, on either the processor or the graphics card or both. One original purpose to overclocking was to end up buying a cheap component and ending with performance similar to an expensive component. Since 2011, Intel now restricts overclocking to a few high end models, meaning that the goal is to make the fastest, faster.

Asking a processor to run faster than its specifications requires more power. This is usually provided in terms of voltage. This increases the power into the system and raises energy lost as heat in the system, which has to be removed, and power consumption goes up (usually efficiency also goes down). Financial services and high frequency trading is an example of an industry that relies on ultimate fast response times regardless of efficiency, so overclocking is par for the course to get better results and make the trade faster than the next guy. Typically we are then left with individuals who need to process work quicker, or gamers looking for a better frame rate or the ability to increase settings without losing immersion. There is a separate group of individuals called extreme overclockers that are not concerned with everyday performance and insist on pushing the hardware to the limit by using coolants such as liquid nitrogen to remove the extra heat (350W+) away. These individuals are on the precipice of stability, only needing to be stable enough to run a benchmark and compare scores around the word. The best extreme overclockers are picked up by PC component manufacturers to help build future products (eg HiCookie and Sofos at GIGABYTE, NickShih at ASRock, Coolice and Shamino at ASUS) or at retailers to build a brand (8Pack at OverclockersUK).


Extreme overclocking at MSI’s HQ

Here at AnandTech, we mainly focus on 24/7 stability (although I have roots in the extreme overclocking community) as our diverse readership ranges from the non-clockers to enthusiasts. This means a good high end air cooler or a liquid cooler, namely in this case either the Cooler Master Nepton 140XL liquid cooler in a push/pull configuration with the supplied fans or a 2kg TRUE Copper air cooler with a 150CFM Delta fan. Both of these are more than sufficient to push the hardware for general overclocking and 24/7 use (though I hesitate to recommend the TRUE Copper for a regular system due to its mass unless upright).


The Cooler Master Nepton 140XL

In our testing, we keep it relatively simple. The frequency of a modern Intel processor is determined by the base frequency (~100 MHz) and the multiplier (20-45+). These two numbers are multiplied together to give the final frequency, and our overclocking is performed by raising the multiplier.

The other variable in overclocking is the voltage. All processors have an operating voltage out of the box, known as the VID or stock voltage. In general, the processor architecture will have a stock voltage within a certain range, and processors with that architecture will fall on the spectrum. As time goes on, we might find that the average VID falls on new processors within the same architecture due to improvements in the manufacturing process, but it ultimately is the luck of the draw. When a faster frequency is requested, this draws more power and in order to remain stable, the voltage should be increased. Most motherboards have an auto calibration tool for voltage based on the set frequency, though these tend to be very conservative values to ensure all processors are capable. Users can adjust the voltage with an offset (e.g. +0.100 volts) or in most cases can set the absolute voltage (as in 1.200 volts). For a given frequency, there will be a minimum voltage to which the processor is stable, and the process by-and-large is a case of trial and error. When the system works, the frequency/voltage combination is typically tested for stability using stress tests to ensure proper operation, as well as probing temperatures of the system to avoid overheating which causes the processor to override the settings and induce a low voltage/frequency mode to cool down.

There is a tertiary concern in that when a processor is performing work, the voltage across the processor will drop. This can result in instability, and there are two ways to approach this - a higher initial voltage, or adjusting what is called the load line calibration which will react to this drop. Both methods have their downsides, such as power consumption or temperatures, but where possible most users should adjust the load line calibration. This ensures a constant voltage no matter the processor workload.

At AnandTech, our overclocking regime is thus - we test the system at default settings and acquire the stock voltage for the stock frequency. Then we set the processor multiplier at one higher than normal, and set the voltage to the round down to the 0.1 volt level (e.g. 1.227 VID becomes 1.200). The system is then tested for stability, which our case is a simple stability test consisting of the POV-Ray benchmark, five minutes on the OCCT stress test and a run of 3DMark Firestrike. If this test regime is successful, and the CPU remains below 95C throughout without overheating, we mark it as a success and raise the multiplier by one. If any test fails (either the system does not boot, the system gets stuck or we get a blue screen), we raise the voltage by 0.025 volts and repeat the process at the same multiplier. All the adjustments are made in the BIOS and we get an overall picture of how the processor performance and temperature scales with voltage.

Here are our results with the Broadwell i7-5775C in the MSI Z97A Gaming 6 :

Our top result was 4.2 GHz on all cores, reaching 80C. When we selected 4.3 GHz, even with another 0.300 volts, the system would not be stable.

To a number of people, this is very disappointing. Previous Intel architectures have over clocked from 4.4 GHz to 5.0 GHz, so any increase in base performance for Broadwell is overshadowed by the higher frequency possible on older platforms. This has been a recent unfortunate trend in the overclocking performance of Intel’s high end processors since Sandy Bridge:

Intel 24/7 Overclocking Expected Results in MHz
  Stock Speed Good OC Great OC
Sandy Bridge i7 3400 4700 4900
Ivy Bridge i7 3500 4500 4700
Haswell i7 3500 4300 4500
Broadwell i7 3300 4100 4300

Not mentioned in the table, but for Haswell a Devil's Canyon based processor (such as the i7-4790K) could yield an extra +100-200 MHz in temperature limited situations as we found during our testing.

It is worth noting at least two points here. When Intel reduces the process node size, the elements of the processor are smaller and removing the heat generated is more problematic. Some of this can be mitigated through the fundamental design of the processor, such as not having heat generating logic next to each other and then used in the program in quick succession to make a hotspot. However, if a processor is fundamentally designed as a mobile first platform, overclocking may not even be a consideration at the design phase and merely tacked on as a ‘feature’ to certain models at the end.

Other methods have been used in the past to increase overclockability, such as changing the thermal interface material between the processor and the heatspreader. Intel did this on its Devil’s Canyon line of processors as a ‘Haswell upgrade’ and most results showed that it afforded another 10ºC of headroom. To that extent, many users interested in getting the most out of their Haswell processors found the best ways to remove a heatspreader (voiding the warranty) but getting better overclocking performance.

With all that said, it is important to consider what we are dealing here with Broadwell. This is a Crystal Well design, which looks like this:

This is an image taken for us when we reviewed the i7-4950HQ, the first Crystal Well based processor aimed specifically for high powered laptops and all-in-one devices. On the left is the processor die, and on the right is the eDRAM die, both on the same package. The thing to note here is that when the heatspreader is applied, different parts of the package will generate different amount of heat. As a result, this needs to be planned in accordance with the design.

What I’m specifically getting to here is thermal paste application. Many users here will have different comments about the best way to apply thermal paste, and for those following the industry they will remember how suggested methods change over time based on the silicon in the package. For the most part, the suggested methods revolve around a pea-sized blob in the center of the processor and a heatsink with sufficient force to help spread the paste. This minimizes air bubbles which can cause worse performance.

As a personal side note, I heavily discourage the credit card/spreading method due to the air bubble situation. The only arrangement where the spreading application is used should be for sub-zero overclocking.

With Broadwell, I took the pea-sized blob approach, strapped on a big cooler, and went to work. Almost immediately the processor temperature under load rose to 90ºC, which seemed extremely high. I turned the system off, removed the cooler, and placed it back on without doing anything, and the temperature under load dropped a few degrees. After some trial and error, the best anecdotal temperature arrangement was for a line of thermal paste from top to bottom of the CPU (where the arrow on the corner of the CPU is in the bottom left).

Put bluntly, the reason why this method works better than the pea is down to where the heat generating spots on the CPU are. With a pea sized blob in the middle, with a slightly wrong mounting, it will spread to the eDRAM rather than over the processor. A line ensures that both are covered, transferring heat to the cooler.

Now I should note that this method is useful when you are in a temperature limited overclock situation. It would seem that our CPU merely would not go above 4.2 GHz, regardless of the voltage applied. But in terms of thermal management, thermal paste application became important again.

The Intel Broadwell Review Part 2 Comparing IPC: Memory Latency and CPU Benchmarks
Comments Locked

121 Comments

View All Comments

  • Pino - Monday, August 3, 2015 - link

    Looks like my i7 3770 will live longer.
  • icebox - Monday, August 3, 2015 - link

    I'm really curious how the Skylake i7 will present itself in exactly this comparison article. I, like many am still on a 2600k and pondering an upgrade to either haswell-e or skylake.
  • blaktron - Monday, August 3, 2015 - link

    Me too. I run my 2600k at 4.5 ghz on air with no stability issues ever and by the looks of it, 4 years later, I'm STILL looking at a lateral upgrade. Skylake better at least add some OC headroom back along with its 15% or this might be the first gaming PC i have that dies of old age...
  • lilmoe - Monday, August 3, 2015 - link

    I'd wait it out if I were you. The 2600K is absolutely no slouch, and you'll probably be disappointed after spending lots of cash on Haswell-E. The only thing going for these newer chips are peripherals, so it's all about your priorities.
  • HollyDOL - Monday, August 3, 2015 - link

    2500k at 4.3GHz here, still no pressurre for upgrades. Not that I'd complain :-)
  • HollyDOL - Monday, August 3, 2015 - link

    pressure*

    where is the [edit]?
  • faizoff - Monday, August 3, 2015 - link

    Yup same here, OC'ed my 2500K to 4.6 Ghz on air and have had the same build for over 4 years now. Still excellent performance and the only regret I have is not getting the 2600K at the time. I've started to delve greatly into developing and server VMs locally so that would've been a great setup.
  • Kevin G - Monday, August 3, 2015 - link

    I'm in a similar boot with a 2600K but I also have a Sandy Bridge-E 3930k. So far I'm not feeling any pressure to upgrade from on the processor side for either chip.

    For me, the most attractive thing about Skylake is the chipset which adds 20 PCIe lanes on top of the 16 from the CPU. This should enable some motherboards to stack on features without compromising dual GPU scenarios and even enable triple GPU setups with all 8x links. (There is enough lanes to do quad GPUs but DMI would be too much of a bottleneck for two cards + IO.)

    Haswell-E on the other hand just doesn't interest me at all. The low end 5820K is a cheap 6 core part but has the reduced PCIe lane count. In many regards, SkyLake with Z170 would be the better option than a 5820K setup. Going to the 5930K improves IO but the price premium just isn't worth it. Thankfully Broadwell-E should be arriving at the very end of this year/early next year so hopefully Intel can revive the X99 platform.
  • Mr Perfect - Monday, August 3, 2015 - link

    Yes, thanks for including the 2600 in this. Mine has been doing well, and with DX12 reducing CPU dependance in the future, it's probably going to be relevant for some time. It's nice to see what an upgrade will actually be worth.
  • Sttm - Monday, August 3, 2015 - link

    Heh me too. 2600k OC'd to 4.5 ghz going on over 4 years now. Which is just crazy because before that I upgraded CPU every 2 -3 years. But now it seems Intel does not care about performance, just power/performance, and AMD is a clusterduck.

Log in

Don't have an account? Sign up now