My Ryzen 5 5600 isn't getting the turbo clock (still in the base clock)
Even using cpu-z stress, the processor does not reach turbo clock, it keeps at 3.5 ghz at all time.
My config:
Ryzen 5 5600
A320MH 6.7 biostar
16gb ram 3200mhz
GTX 1660 Super Zotac
***Edit: I used a Ryzen 5 2400G for 1 year and 6 months and the turbo speed always was normal
Have a look in these areas:
Your power plan settings in windows,
Look in AMD overclocking in your Bios, if you can reset your CMOS (then make sure you put your XMP setting back on your RAM as it will also reset to default)
If you can reset, look into Precision boost overdrive, that will allow you to set your boost
I reseted and setted the PBO enabled, and the clock still 3495 mhz
Thanks for your time!
sfernandes, please post screenshots of Ryzen Master (RM) in both Basic and Advanced modes. Thanks, John.
Thanks, sfernandes. It looks like there are several disagreements between the two sides of the Basic and between Basic and Advanced view.
Have you done a Clear CMOS? If not please follow the instructions in MB manual and do one. Then look at the Basic view and if still incongruence, then try to correct it. I suggest you try Reset in lower right corner of Basic view. If the reset works, restart your machine and see how it works. If not, try setting Default mode and CO mode off. Please post SSs of the results. Thanks, John.
I reset the BIOS by itself, I'm going to reset it by the inserted battery.
The SS with your recomendation:
That was without games
Now the SS with cpuz stress test:
OBS: the HWmonitor and CPUZ never change the "3493mhz clock"
sfernandes, please post screenshots of Ryzen Master (RM) in both Basic and Advanced modes. Thanks, John.
1) You could try HWINFO64, run as administrator, sensors only. Let it stay in the background. Run some test software for a couple of minutes and see, what was the highest clockspeed achieved.
2) Check CPU temperatures. If CPU is too hot, it will throttle and not boost clockspeeds. Would point to cooling issue, so if fan running, did you remove plastic wrap from heatsink before installation, remember to use thermal paste and tighten CPU cooler properly?
3) Try clearing CMOS if you already have not. Basically unplug computer from wallsocket, remove CMOS battery, put it back and start computer. Remember to re-enable XMP and other such features.
4) Motherboard VRM and PSU: You did not mention power supply - and wattage isn't the only thing, quality is important too. Also 6c/12th 5600 uses way more power than 4c/8Th 2400G, so especially if your motherboard is a getting old (capasitors are have seen better days), it might struggle to power that CPU.