I don't have any problem with this, it's just that when I turn the voltage down a bit, apps start crashing or blue screens appear.
It's often easy to get it working via apps like Cinebench R23.
But recently I ran a 30-minute stress test, maximum consumption of 290W, and one core reached a maximum temperature of 90°C, so the throttle is nowhere to be seen.
It is completely stable hence there are no crashes.
The only problem I sometimes encounter is that some applications like Paint.net don't want to start or Battlenet intermittently.
Then the process simply crashes, and they may not be able to properly handle the P/E cores and core count size.
On the other hand, there are also games that can handle a maximum of 16 cores, for example, but do not know what to do with more and simply do not start.
There is of course a workaround for this, but you can't blame the CPU for that either.
Satisfied user for a year and a half now.
prove:
- i9 13900K Stock @ -0.06V SVID Global Under Voltage
- Asus ROG Maximus Z790 Extreme (BIOS 0219 Early September 2022)
- 4 x 32GB DDR5-5600 Corsair Dominator Platinum RGB CL40 @ 5400Mhz XMP enabled.
- EVGA GTX1080Ti FTW3 11GB
- Corsair AX1200i
- Corsair H170i with 6 Noctua NF-A14 fans at 3000 RPM.
And the SP rating for the CPU is only “97” which is pretty average as silicon would expect (CPU quality)
[Reactie gewijzigd door CriticalHit_NL op 9 april 2024 15:50]
“Lifelong entrepreneur. Total writer. Internet ninja. Analyst. Friendly music enthusiast.”
More Stories
Monster Jam Showdown Launch Trailer
The European Digital Twin Ocean prototype reveals many possibilities
Instagram now lets you add a song to your account