Hi there,
With the new 9 series motherboards that have LLC you have to approach overclocking in a different way to what you are used to.
Previously, on say the series 7 and 8 motherboards, when you are trying to overclock your CPU you would gradually increase the CPU Voltage until you found the sweet spot that allowed you to run with increased speed but at minimum voltage.
Things are very different on the 9 series boards and you now have to set your initial CPU voltage higher than you would normally have had to do, to allow for the voltage drop. This is not a fault with the motherboard but is part of the design. For example, on my previous motherboard (GA-890FXA-UD5) with my Phenom ii 1090T I could get 4.0GHz with the CPU voltage set at around 1.4V see here for more information:
http://forum.giga-byte.co.uk/index.php/topic,3637.msg27345.html#msg27345With the same processor but on the GA-990FXA-UD5 I have to set the initial voltage to about 1.5V to allow for the VDroop when the processor goes under load. When loading the CPU the voltage drops back to between 1.4200V and 1.440V which is almost where it was on the previous motherboard. Check here for more information:
http://forum.giga-byte.co.uk/index.php/topic,6187.msg48974.html#msg48974When unlocking cores you could well find that you need to increase the voltage to a higher level than you would anticipate as you are, in fact, now running a 3 or 4 core processor. Also the cores may have been locked off originally because they needed more voltage than was usual to get them to work properly.
You could use your CPU Voltage settings from your previous motherboard as a guide here. If you were able to run OK with all the cores unlocked and the voltage was at 1.35V, for example, set the voltage on your new motherboard to 1.45V to compensate for the VDroop.
I'm afraid it is going to be trial and error, until you can find the correct settings for your particular components but bear in mind that although you are setting a higher initial voltage, according to both AMD and Gigabyte this is OK and won't damage the CPU (unless you are really silly with the increase) as the higher Voltage is only applied when the CPU is idle, as soon as you start to load the CPU the voltage will drop back to protect the CPU.