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Based on Report 07 on Win11 24H2, Ryzen Master showed core voltage jumping between 1.26V - 1.33V, peaking at 1.38V. I tried locking the RAM at 3200MHz, but the frame pool barely improved—I realized locking frequency wouldn't fix unstable power. I used OCCT to lock the temperature threshold and ran Prime95 to fine-tune the voltage curve to 1.29V - 1.32V. In the next match, frequencies settled at 3196MHz - 3226MHz and the tearing vanished. MSI Afterburner confirmed the overclock is stable with temps at 67℃ - 72℃. However, with the high voltage offset, the VRM temps climbed significantly and the fan noise became a total distraction in a quiet room. Last updated onApril 25, 2026 10:19 PM.

Overclocking Report 07 on Windows 11 showed Ryzen Master monitoring core voltage jittering between 1.28V - 1.35V, which made the frame generation curve look like a saw blade. I tried locking the RAM at 3200MHz, but that did nothing. I ran stability tests in OCCT and went into the BIOS voltage control panel to micro-adjust the core voltage offset to the 1.31V - 1.34V range, then hammered it with Prime95. After that, the frequency stayed stable between 3198MHz - 3228MHz, and the tearing finally stopped. Even so, in Max Performance mode, the package temp hits 74℃ and the fans sound like a jet engine. This board's VRMs are at their physical limit; there's no more room to squeeze. Last updated onApril 22, 2026 9:33 PM.

Referring to the 2026-04G report on Windows 11 24H2, AMD Ryzen Master showed the controller temp swinging between 51 - 66℃, with core power fluctuating between 1.30 - 1.37V, peaking at 1.41V. I tried locking the frequency at 3200MHz, but the frame pool barely improved. I then used OCCT stability tests to lock the temperature threshold and applied pressure with Prime95, tuning the voltage curve to a steady 1.32 - 1.35V range. Back in the hunt, Ryzen Master recorded frequency fluctuations tightening to 3195 - 3225MHz, and the screen tearing vanished. MSI Afterburner verified the overclock stability, but because of the physical limits of the laptop's cooling module, temps still climb back to 68 - 73℃ after long sessions. Constant low temps are just not happening here. Last updated onApril 18, 2026 8:45 PM.

In experiment report JTP9000, I hit a brutal crash loop. I tried forcing the frequency to 3200MHz, but Ryzen Master showed core voltage swinging between 1.32V - 1.39V and temps jumping 53℃ - 68℃, leading to heavy jitters and BSODs. I realized I was pushing the wrong way, so I used the OCCT stability interface to lock the temp threshold and used Prime95 to refine the voltage curve to 1.34V - 1.37V. After that, the frequency held steady at 3200MHz - 3230MHz, and the tearing vanished with temps at 70℃ - 75℃. MSI Afterburner logs confirm the OC is stable, but I've hit a physical thermal wall; any further frequency bumps cause temps to spike instantly. Last updated onMarch 24, 2026 7:17 PM.

In stress test CP-2026-0403, I found the memory frequency flickering between 3180MHz - 3240MHz, with core power swinging from 1.28V - 1.35V. I tried simply locking it at 3200MHz, but the frame generation curve remained jagged—it was a waste of electricity. I switched to Plan B: I used the OCCT stability page to lock the temperature threshold and ran Prime95 for a memory soak, then tuned the voltage curve to a tight 1.30V - 1.33V. Back in Night City, the frequency flutter was suppressed to 3195MHz - 3225MHz, and the tearing disappeared. The trade-off is that package temps hit 68℃ - 73℃, so you need your fans at 100%. MSI Afterburner logs show the system is now rock solid. It is loud as hell, but the visuals are absolutely mesmerizing. Last updated onApril 3, 2026 2:58 PM.

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