A tip that saved me a couple of times. Save you "default settings" to a profile before you start messing around, that way you always have a working baseline to go back to
I usually make a "default" not particularly optimized profile but with all the basic stuff taken care of, like XMP, power limits, onboard devices, fan configuration, and I save that as default
same here, my default profile with basics enabled/disabled like uefi boot on and led stuff off when shutdown. i wish there would be a option to save all of the 8 profiles at once in just one file. same with recovering.
@@Hansen999tbh, there is just too much fumbling to load them in again from a usb key. i have one mayor oc profile for my 12600kf on my z690 Strix F which has mby around 10 settings to change. the others are mostly to temporary testing things out. the default profile has, like i said before, just two settings to change. if it would be more simple and fast to backup and restore then probably i would have more than just one big setup. i like the Asus uefi bios more than every other bios. it's one of the main reasons why i'm buying Asus boards for around 20 years.
Thanks for walking me through building my new creator PC. It is screaming!!! Its plenty fast for me now without these suggestions but I'll remember this video when I'm ready.
FOR CRYING OUT Loud...PLEASE STABILIZE THAT DESK, ALL THE ROCKING IS DRIVING MY BRAIN INTO A WALL... holy crap brother, you got everything skin tight with design, tech, presentation and great editing...however that rickety desk needs some shim under it...pleassseee!
My Bios settings on an X670E ProArt are, EXPO on, 7950X with a temp limit at 85ºC, 150W limit, but definitely the most important settings nowadays with DDR5 are "memory context restore" and "power down enable", those two made my computer starting times from one minute and 15s to around 20s to windows, a massive difference from stock settings. For reference I have a 2*32GB 6000 CL30.
100% this. I honestly thought my PC was knackered when it took so long when I first built it, especially as the intel, AM4 and FM2+ (I like APUs for ITX HTPCs) PCs I have always booted normally so that was my baseline expectation. Lol I only realised it was a really slow boot when I decided to say "sod it I need a coffee" and it had posted when I got back.
@@Fortespyproductions i also have 32gb 2x 6000 asus tuf 650 + 7900x + 7900 xtx my pc is on 4 weeks the off weeks.. because of work.. but, if i must reset it.. it takes long time.. anoying.. but, when bios is posting.. then its just seconds back in.. i will try those settings @mel78336 mention
This video is barely relevant when the apps write the clocks to bios like Ryzen master the gpu does not have a clock in bios it is running from the os it doesent need to
You should explain why you think it's important to enable the settings. For example under what circumstances will an IGPU help creators and why, and then give a demonstration.
I'm guessing you already knows this, but for those who wonder why the IGPU should be enabled if you are using a Nvidia or AMD GPU for your normal use it's because the IGPU on the processor allows video encoding programs to use Intel Quick Sync. Compared to the functions provided by Nvidia and AMD for video encoding Quick Sync is supposed to be both faster and provide better quality. One thing is for certain and that's that it doesn't use the gaming GPU's abilities to do the video encode which should mean it doesn't restrict the gaming performance that same way that it otherwise would. Now if you don't do online streaming of your game play and rarely if ever records gameplay then not having the IGPU enabled won't really be an issue. But for those streaming video and doing a lot of game recording it can improve life a bit. XMP improves the memory performance which improves performance for the computer. The power settings for the CPU lowers the power used and the heat produced. This can help if the heat sink isn't the best, and for some processors like the 14900K the higher power setting can cause instabilities. This last is a bit of a mystery subject as Intel haven't really told us exactly why this happens, but they also provide the official max values which the motherboard manufacturers just didn't care to follow because to do so would mean their motherboards would present lower benchmark figures than motherboards that ignored the limitations. When dialing in the fan settings monitor the temperatures to make sure nothing starts running real hot. Temperature monitor software often have a feature to signal if temperatures reach certain levels. I set that up on a friends computer and told him to check for dust build up occasionally. Well over a year later he called and asked why his computer was calling "Game over! Game over man!" over and over. Well it turned out that there were lots of dust in his CPU heatsink. Cleaning this out solved the problem. The sound clip I had hijacked from a game he played when I adjusted his fan speeds.
How's about for a Davinci resolve project whose timeline comprises of .mp4 files. Would timeline playback and rendering to mp4 be faster on the the i7-14700k IGPU than they would on an RTX 4080 super?
@@3d-illusions I don't think you would experience a big improvement, if at all when playing movies. Quick Sync is really at it's best when encoding video. That's why it's so popular to have a Intel CPU with IGPU for Plex servers. Thing is you can store the video in the full resolution and then let Plex resize it to something more fitting of the device playing the video. So you can store 4K resolution movies and have the option to stream it to say a phone at 1080P or 720p resolution. This is easier on the WIFI than sending the 4K original to the phone, and the phone doesn't have to resize that huge movie. I've seen a video where the performance was tested on NAS boxes with or without the Intel IGPU. Without a IGPU the NAS could handle resizing two or three 4K videos to 720P in real time. With the IGPU it could handle something like eight, ten or more simultaneous video streams of different movies being resized and encoded in real time.
Before updating the BIOS you should always Load Optimized Defaults to remove any overclock settings such as Instant 6Ghz and XMP, otherwise you risk bricking your motherboard.
I built my new PC and started it up and the case fans were going crazy, very loud. I saw the voltage settings were on auto so I initially thought they were loud fans and I would have to deal with it, but it didn't seem right. I switched them to PWM and they worked as they should, so much quieter. I don't know why the BIOs didn't detect the PWM fans, but it didn't.
Most people don't know, that your EFI partition on your first drive is a FAT16 partition. With Linux, you can mount that drive and store your bios update files on that partition and update the bios without an USB-stick or SD-card reader. However, trying to give that EFI partition a drive letter on windoze, is very painful and my not work. The EFI partition is still just a FAT16 partition with two more flags to mark the partition as "system reserved" and EFI. A regular win11 installation creates an EFI partition 256 MB in size. Only around 30-32 MB are used on that partition. Some M$$ files and the boot-loader, which leaves you enough room to even fit two recent bios update files.
A warning. Updated my bios on my Gigabyte Aero G Z790 to the July update. I saved my profile first. Bios update wirkes, but then I uploaded the saved settings and it bricked. Managed to eventually coax it back into Bios and did the update without loading the saved settings and all was well. I did save the fan settings separately and was able to update that profile by itself. Many thanks for all your hard work. I wouldn't have built a computernwithout your help.
I'd still argue creator boards should be within Intel spec out of the box (at least now there is a setting in 12+gen bioses to set it instead of having to do it manually for most boards). Running unlimited pl1/2 can make your system run worse due to thermal throttling and as people have reported can cause the CPU to degrade over time. My system benched a little faster once I set proper pl1/2 and undervolted and the CPU was running 8-9c cooler, ymmv with an AIO or water cooling of course. Gigabyte actually did a 'decent' job updating the UI in the newer bioses, you should have updated that board to F28 first.
ENABLE PMIC, too. It treats every memory stick individually and not as a group regarding the settings for each one. Also, the BIOS and board "train" each other and it may take several minutes to boot the first time after making some changes. Sometimes it takes several minutes. If you have been waiting more than 7-8 minutes, it does not like your bios settings, and you will have to undo a change. Usually, it will reboot and tell you so, but sometimes it does not.
its not vram , its hardware reserved memory, vram is half of you ram (like if you have 32gb ram then your igpu use 16gb vram); and video editing not going to use 3d engine of igpu , it use decoders only ,. for 3d/encoding it use dgpu
@@IIII_MAD_IIII It's more fun that that. traditional VRAM has separate input and output channels for the memory. In effect memory can be read at the same time that it's written to. This is important for a GPU as generating the screen buffer requires a lot of reading and the programs using the GPU doesn't need to wait because the memory is being read. So VRAM is more complex than ordinary DRAM memory. This is of course also a problem with an IGPU as all ram it has access to is ordinary DRAM.
I didn't realize the IGPU was turned off. I'm going through all of the above. Suggestion for follow on video: I built the ASUS Dream PC from the earlier videos, but now I'm noticing ASUS has installed well over 20 different apps and services and the list seems to be growing. Asus just installed Armory Create Lite. Could you do something on debloating all the ASUS stuff they install for their creator motherboard? I've been doing independent research to get rid of some of this stuff, but I keep getting mixed messages as to what is really needed in my effort to slim down the ASUS services and apps.
What I found on Reddit is that you should disable for better fps in games like call of duty and better system latency overall . Resizable bar only work in some games not all in some games makes more harm than good . I disable it cuz I only play cs , hunt showdown , apex , The finals & Battle bit But you should do your own research . I’m on AMD platform
with a Arctic Liquid mk3 240 on my 12600kf@5(p)/4(e)GHz and 1x120@back/2x140@top be quiet pwm high speed fans there is no reason to setup any fan profiles because the stock pwm settings on my z690 Strix F are just perfectly fine. mce doesn't really work on my kf. the all core turbo is always at 4.5GHz no matter what i try. to overclock the ordinary way is more fun and vcore wise much more healthier for the silicon. i also don't need or use the xm-profile. but for beginners all those things are nice to have.
I just installed an i7 11700k recently and for some reason, it was running at 4600 base speed no matter what even though it’s true base speed is 3600. Now randomly it changed itself to it’s regular 3600. I’m not sure how this happened or how i can even check where to change this etc.
Hi i wanna ask something. I have a very big performance issues in bios, when i enter bios everything moves in likes 10 fps and is really annoying, do you know any cause for that ?
What scares me is seeing TT flash on the screen and seeing no TT900 chassis in the room. That's down right pyschotic. If it's a 5950x creators system, Please go to bios and negative offset the voltage to negative 0.10000 Unless you wish to receive divine disfavor.
I purchased an Asus Proart B760 D4. didnt want to get new memory and didnt want to spent 400 on the higher end Proart board. Is this or all Proart Boards non Over clockable? I cant tweek CPU settings on my B760.
B series chipsets does not support CPU overclocking. You should use a motherboard with Z series chipset AND a K series CPU for overclocking to be available.
1:00 When the manufacturer logo appears, with instructions at the bottom of the screen ie: "DEL : BIOS SETUP \ Q-FLASH", just press the DEL key once. That way you don't have to look like you have no idea what you are doing, by hammering the DEL key like a RUclipsr.
*As a gamer I have the iGPU turned off, something about it sharing cpu cache between the iGPU and dedicated GPU, I want it all used by the dedicated GPU*
Hey brother i need your suggestion, is this build good for 1080p edits with motions graphics? i5 12600k Msi pro b760m a wifi ddr4 Corsair vengeance 8gb x2 ddr4 Crucial P3 512gb gen 4 Cooler master mwe 550 watt 80+ bronze Zotac rtx 3060 12gb And revolution 05 cabinet. Is this specs good ? Am i pairing anything wrong Do i need an aio or air cooler or stock cooler is good ?
that 4KW rating is the motherboard manufacturers way of saying Unlimited. Now that is of course still limited. For instance the PSU can probably provide something between 600W and 1.2KW so that's a limit, but more importantly the Voltage Regulation Module (VRM) on the motherboard provides the real limit in how much power can be sent to the CPU. Effectively that limits the possible power to something probably less than 400W, but even without that limit there are only so much power that the CPU can handle without blowing up. So you will never see the CPU draw 4KW. But limiting the CPU power to what Intel recommends is going to make sure it doesn't over heat as easily and probably will mean it will work for a longer time. Using the higher power options can make fail earlier, while at the recommended values it should still work fine in ten or even twenty years. Now you most probably won't want to use it in twenty years but not having it die suddenly is pretty nice.
Quicksync. It's pretty good at speeding up multimedia functions in a number of apps like Resolve without using DGPU. Matters a lot less for gamers like he mentioned.
XMP and EXPO is essentially the same thing. But memory manufacturers can choose one of the other. The thing is EXPO values are targeted to support the memory controller in AMD processors while XMP is targeting Intel processors. The same things are handled, but they do have different capabilities. So while XMP memory settings can work on a AMD system it's not totally certain. Same with EXPO on intel platforms. The hard part is figuring out if the memory is really stable. It might sound simple but it really isn't. There are of course the cases when the computer will crash immediately or not even load the OS before crashing. That's the easy situation. Then you have the situation when the computer crashes after half an hour to ten hours. These are a bit harder to diagnose. Running a memory test program like Memtest86+ might or might not immediately find a memory problem like this. What's important to know is that just because every mem test you throw at the machine says it's fine does not mean it really is working as it should. Some years back I used to run Prime95 in torturetest mode configured to use max memory. This did quite often find any problematic memory within 24hours. Yes every machine I built, mostly servers, was stress tested for at least 24 hours before being delivered to the customer. If the machine has ECC memory you have to check the system log for ECC errors as really there shouldn't be any of those in a new machine. But even that isn't a total guarantee that everything is perfectly stable. Still you have at least done what you can to test it. Now if you find errors then it might be a memory module that's not perfect, or it might be that the XMP settings doesn't really work with AMD processors, or the memory controller on the CPU isn't perfect, or or the motherboard isn't good at handling faster memory and this can be this particular motherboard or the model of motherboard has a less than optimal design. That's why I say memory problems can be tricky. Now when I fond a problem at work I could change the memory, the CPU the motherboard and usually in that order until the problem was solved. For a home user this is trickier.
@@blahorgaslisk7763 wow thats the best support info ive read ever, i was very lost on throu what was going on with this xmp at an am5.. ive been dealing with a lot of strange things such as guaranteed bsod on first boot, and stable work on second try everyday [just as if pc had to actually "warm up"] like a car or so, weird asf
@@darkoz1692 Correct, but the memory controllers behave a bit differently on AND and Intel processors. Generally the Intel processors supports higher RAM frequencies, so the XMP settings if programmed correctly may stress the memory more than what the memory controller on a AMD processor will handle. That's part of what makes memory a tricky part whenever you start to push the performance. Now it's been ages, or at least fifteen years since I last tried to manually optimize memory performance. I can't even remember the names of all the settings so I just go with EMP or EXPO and don't bother trying to tighten the settings. But I do expect that when using memory that has the settings set for AMD or Intel it will work flawlessly. It doesn't always work that way but then it's either a faulty memory module or a processor that has a less than perfect memory controller. And yes, it happens that a processor is either better than standard or worse. That's why overclockers bin their processors to find the ones that will perform at higher speeds and tighter timings.
Updating the BIOS first seems like the best order to make changes.
😇
Updating BIOS only set them to default values again
And updates the Agesa ver on AMD variant for Intel it'll be Micro Code updates.
Updated my bios and my sound went away
😂😂 true
A tip that saved me a couple of times.
Save you "default settings" to a profile before you start messing around, that way you always have a working baseline to go back to
I usually make a "default" not particularly optimized profile but with all the basic stuff taken care of, like XMP, power limits, onboard devices, fan configuration, and I save that as default
same here, my default profile with basics enabled/disabled like uefi boot on and led stuff off when shutdown. i wish there would be a option to save all of the 8 profiles at once in just one file. same with recovering.
@@steffenlze0178 Good point, you don't see backup of your profiles on many MB's.
Not sure if mine has it via the IPMI (I'm running server grade stuff)
@@Hansen999tbh, there is just too much fumbling to load them in again from a usb key. i have one mayor oc profile for my 12600kf on my z690 Strix F which has mby around 10 settings to change. the others are mostly to temporary testing things out. the default profile has, like i said before, just two settings to change. if it would be more simple and fast to backup and restore then probably i would have more than just one big setup. i like the Asus uefi bios more than every other bios. it's one of the main reasons why i'm buying Asus boards for around 20 years.
Yes that’s right
Thanks for walking me through building my new creator PC. It is screaming!!! Its plenty fast for me now without these suggestions but I'll remember this video when I'm ready.
FOR CRYING OUT Loud...PLEASE STABILIZE THAT DESK, ALL THE ROCKING IS DRIVING MY BRAIN INTO A WALL... holy crap brother, you got everything skin tight with design, tech, presentation and great editing...however that rickety desk needs some shim under it...pleassseee!
ps, your style is impeccable great editing skills!
My Bios settings on an X670E ProArt are, EXPO on, 7950X with a temp limit at 85ºC, 150W limit, but definitely the most important settings nowadays with DDR5 are "memory context restore" and "power down enable", those two made my computer starting times from one minute and 15s to around 20s to windows, a massive difference from stock settings.
For reference I have a 2*32GB 6000 CL30.
ye , this is no 1 tip in AM5
100% this. I honestly thought my PC was knackered when it took so long when I first built it, especially as the intel, AM4 and FM2+ (I like APUs for ITX HTPCs) PCs I have always booted normally so that was my baseline expectation. Lol I only realised it was a really slow boot when I decided to say "sod it I need a coffee" and it had posted when I got back.
Is use the X670E Hero with the Ryzen 7950X.... Kingston Fury 32GB x2... 6000Hz Can you give me a guide on how to get the best from my motherboard
@@Fortespyproductions i also have 32gb 2x 6000 asus tuf 650 + 7900x + 7900 xtx my pc is on 4 weeks the off weeks.. because of work.. but, if i must reset it.. it takes long time.. anoying.. but, when bios is posting.. then its just seconds back in.. i will try those settings @mel78336 mention
This video is barely relevant when the apps write the clocks to bios like Ryzen master the gpu does not have a clock in bios it is running from the os it doesent need to
You should explain why you think it's important to enable the settings. For example under what circumstances will an IGPU help creators and why, and then give a demonstration.
I'm guessing you already knows this, but for those who wonder why the IGPU should be enabled if you are using a Nvidia or AMD GPU for your normal use it's because the IGPU on the processor allows video encoding programs to use Intel Quick Sync. Compared to the functions provided by Nvidia and AMD for video encoding Quick Sync is supposed to be both faster and provide better quality. One thing is for certain and that's that it doesn't use the gaming GPU's abilities to do the video encode which should mean it doesn't restrict the gaming performance that same way that it otherwise would.
Now if you don't do online streaming of your game play and rarely if ever records gameplay then not having the IGPU enabled won't really be an issue. But for those streaming video and doing a lot of game recording it can improve life a bit.
XMP improves the memory performance which improves performance for the computer.
The power settings for the CPU lowers the power used and the heat produced. This can help if the heat sink isn't the best, and for some processors like the 14900K the higher power setting can cause instabilities. This last is a bit of a mystery subject as Intel haven't really told us exactly why this happens, but they also provide the official max values which the motherboard manufacturers just didn't care to follow because to do so would mean their motherboards would present lower benchmark figures than motherboards that ignored the limitations.
When dialing in the fan settings monitor the temperatures to make sure nothing starts running real hot. Temperature monitor software often have a feature to signal if temperatures reach certain levels. I set that up on a friends computer and told him to check for dust build up occasionally. Well over a year later he called and asked why his computer was calling "Game over! Game over man!" over and over. Well it turned out that there were lots of dust in his CPU heatsink. Cleaning this out solved the problem. The sound clip I had hijacked from a game he played when I adjusted his fan speeds.
How's about for a Davinci resolve project whose timeline comprises of .mp4 files. Would timeline playback and rendering to mp4 be faster on the the i7-14700k IGPU than they would on an RTX 4080 super?
@@3d-illusions I don't think you would experience a big improvement, if at all when playing movies. Quick Sync is really at it's best when encoding video. That's why it's so popular to have a Intel CPU with IGPU for Plex servers. Thing is you can store the video in the full resolution and then let Plex resize it to something more fitting of the device playing the video. So you can store 4K resolution movies and have the option to stream it to say a phone at 1080P or 720p resolution. This is easier on the WIFI than sending the 4K original to the phone, and the phone doesn't have to resize that huge movie.
I've seen a video where the performance was tested on NAS boxes with or without the Intel IGPU. Without a IGPU the NAS could handle resizing two or three 4K videos to 720P in real time. With the IGPU it could handle something like eight, ten or more simultaneous video streams of different movies being resized and encoded in real time.
Thanks so much for the tips! I've switched to PC a year ago and still learning the ropes.
Before updating the BIOS you should always Load Optimized Defaults to remove any overclock settings such as Instant 6Ghz and XMP, otherwise you risk bricking your motherboard.
nice video!!
tip no4 : if mobo out of spec with intel, we have to change AC Loadline and LLC settings ,. not Powerlimits/ intel baseline profiles
i like these beat sync video editing style, but i wish the song kept rolling a bit longer with low gain till fading out
I built my new PC and started it up and the case fans were going crazy, very loud. I saw the voltage settings were on auto so I initially thought they were loud fans and I would have to deal with it, but it didn't seem right. I switched them to PWM and they worked as they should, so much quieter. I don't know why the BIOs didn't detect the PWM fans, but it didn't.
Most people don't know, that your EFI partition on your first drive is a FAT16 partition. With Linux, you can mount that drive and store your bios update files on that partition and update the bios without an USB-stick or SD-card reader.
However, trying to give that EFI partition a drive letter on windoze, is very painful and my not work. The EFI partition is still just a FAT16 partition with two more flags to mark the partition as "system reserved" and EFI.
A regular win11 installation creates an EFI partition 256 MB in size. Only around 30-32 MB are used on that partition. Some M$$ files and the boot-loader, which leaves you enough room to even fit two recent bios update files.
Very helpful.... Need to rewatch on my phone and go through my bios later today. Thx again.
A warning. Updated my bios on my Gigabyte Aero G Z790 to the July update. I saved my profile first. Bios update wirkes, but then I uploaded the saved settings and it bricked. Managed to eventually coax it back into Bios and did the update without loading the saved settings and all was well. I did save the fan settings separately and was able to update that profile by itself.
Many thanks for all your hard work. I wouldn't have built a computernwithout your help.
My initial thought, 6 settings in 21 minutes seems inefficient. But I'm going to watch anyway.
Thanks for this well done video. Thanks for all of the effort you put into your videos.
Thanks For Tips Bro...
I'd still argue creator boards should be within Intel spec out of the box (at least now there is a setting in 12+gen bioses to set it instead of having to do it manually for most boards). Running unlimited pl1/2 can make your system run worse due to thermal throttling and as people have reported can cause the CPU to degrade over time. My system benched a little faster once I set proper pl1/2 and undervolted and the CPU was running 8-9c cooler, ymmv with an AIO or water cooling of course.
Gigabyte actually did a 'decent' job updating the UI in the newer bioses, you should have updated that board to F28 first.
Great video as always
Consider undervolting and you mostly may get same if not better performance and less power and TDP.
Thank you for sharing this. Wondertastic. 😊
as always , ur video is awesome!
can you make video with amd cpu and amd motherboard too?
Could you make one of these videos for asrock motherboards? Everything looks totally different
ENABLE PMIC, too. It treats every memory stick individually and not as a group regarding the settings for each one.
Also, the BIOS and board "train" each other and it may take several minutes to boot the first time after making some changes. Sometimes it takes several minutes. If you have been waiting more than 7-8 minutes, it does not like your bios settings, and you will have to undo a change. Usually, it will reboot and tell you so, but sometimes it does not.
i hope u try up the iGPU vram from 64mb to 256mb in bios and try doing video editing to see any different between them
its not vram , its hardware reserved memory, vram is half of you ram (like if you have 32gb ram then your igpu use 16gb vram);
and video editing not going to use 3d engine of igpu , it use decoders only ,. for 3d/encoding it use dgpu
@@IIII_MAD_IIII know i see thanks
@@IIII_MAD_IIII It's more fun that that. traditional VRAM has separate input and output channels for the memory. In effect memory can be read at the same time that it's written to. This is important for a GPU as generating the screen buffer requires a lot of reading and the programs using the GPU doesn't need to wait because the memory is being read. So VRAM is more complex than ordinary DRAM memory. This is of course also a problem with an IGPU as all ram it has access to is ordinary DRAM.
I didn't realize the IGPU was turned off. I'm going through all of the above.
Suggestion for follow on video: I built the ASUS Dream PC from the earlier videos, but now I'm noticing ASUS has installed well over 20 different apps and services and the list seems to be growing. Asus just installed Armory Create Lite. Could you do something on debloating all the ASUS stuff they install for their creator motherboard? I've been doing independent research to get rid of some of this stuff, but I keep getting mixed messages as to what is really needed in my effort to slim down the ASUS services and apps.
Dell machines have automatic UEFI updates from Windows update if the bios allows it so be careful with Dells when interrupting an update.
If you would have just rebooted after loading the profile it would have set all the things you had set (XMP, Instant 6Ghz, etc.)
How big of a usb stick is good for bios ?
What about Above 4G Decoding \ Resizable Bar? I always enable that option for an extra boost performance of PCIe graphic card.
What I found on Reddit is that you should disable for better fps in games like call of duty and better system latency overall . Resizable bar only work in some games not all in some games makes more harm than good . I disable it cuz I only play cs , hunt showdown , apex , The finals & Battle bit But you should do your own research . I’m on AMD platform
Thank you Lauri.
with a Arctic Liquid mk3 240 on my 12600kf@5(p)/4(e)GHz and 1x120@back/2x140@top be quiet pwm high speed fans there is no reason to setup any fan profiles because the stock pwm settings on my z690 Strix F are just perfectly fine. mce doesn't really work on my kf. the all core turbo is always at 4.5GHz no matter what i try. to overclock the ordinary way is more fun and vcore wise much more healthier for the silicon. i also don't need or use the xm-profile. but for beginners all those things are nice to have.
what is the vert mouse you are using please?
I just installed an i7 11700k recently and for some reason, it was running at 4600 base speed no matter what even though it’s true base speed is 3600. Now randomly it changed itself to it’s regular 3600. I’m not sure how this happened or how i can even check where to change this etc.
Hi i wanna ask something.
I have a very big performance issues in bios, when i enter bios everything moves in likes 10 fps and is really annoying, do you know any cause for that ?
Can you do a video for an Asus X670E Hero Ryzen 7950X
What is the case from the thumbnail?
"Asus motherboards are very easy to understand." LOL.
The majority of amd cpus dont have an igpu only the g variant
What scares me is seeing TT flash on the screen and seeing no TT900 chassis in the room.
That's down right pyschotic.
If it's a 5950x creators system, Please go to bios and negative offset the voltage to negative 0.10000
Unless you wish to receive divine disfavor.
If you have decent rtx card why enable igpu?
igpu have 2 decoders while rtx have 1, igpu support more codec
Intel focused video
Updating a BIOS have to be with USB 2.0, fat32 format
i have an intel cpu 13600k and its work at 6000mhz when i enable expo not xmp .. is it normal ??
whats the case in the thumbnail?
Found out...its the Azza Sanctum. You either can't get it or it's not out yet idk
HY60
@@3RCANX its not the Hyte Y60 I have that case
Here: ruclips.net/video/6uVfhuuu4K8/видео.html
@@theTechNoticethats how I found 😂😂 I thought I saw it in your videos before
What is the name of the Case on the preview image of the video?
ruclips.net/video/6uVfhuuu4K8/видео.html
What is the case in the thumbnail?
This: ruclips.net/video/6uVfhuuu4K8/видео.html
@@theTechNotice out of stock everywhere, dang!
I purchased an Asus Proart B760 D4. didnt want to get new memory and didnt want to spent 400 on the higher end Proart board. Is this or all Proart Boards non Over clockable? I cant tweek CPU settings on my B760.
B series chipsets does not support CPU overclocking. You should use a motherboard with Z series chipset AND a K series CPU for overclocking to be available.
What is the case in the thumbnail - does it actually exist?
13900k P1 actually is just 125W. By their own documentation... Now hidden... Is anyone else aware of this?
I used your link for whokey and they sold me a invalid key then customer Svc doesn’t respond to like chat just some bs automatic response
And the dude takes no responsibility and doesn't even comment or recognize your trouble.
Dope.
Update the company rectified the issue today bit yes he didnt even respond …..
@@jefferyshelton6364 you ain't even the same username.
1:00 When the manufacturer logo appears, with instructions at the bottom of the screen ie: "DEL : BIOS SETUP \ Q-FLASH", just press the DEL key once. That way you don't have to look like you have no idea what you are doing, by hammering the DEL key like a RUclipsr.
*As a gamer I have the iGPU turned off, something about it sharing cpu cache between the iGPU and dedicated GPU, I want it all used by the dedicated GPU*
makes sense, as a creator it's the first thing I turn on :)
Beare that put that cores at 6Ghz is coming with BIG problem with degradation!!
Hey brother i need your suggestion, is this build good for 1080p edits with motions graphics?
i5 12600k
Msi pro b760m a wifi ddr4
Corsair vengeance 8gb x2 ddr4
Crucial P3 512gb gen 4
Cooler master mwe 550 watt 80+ bronze
Zotac rtx 3060 12gb
And revolution 05 cabinet.
Is this specs good ?
Am i pairing anything wrong
Do i need an aio or air cooler or stock cooler is good ?
Thanks, very helpful video!
🫡
Checked my bios and found my pl2 static was 4Kw! WHAT?? so manually dropped it to be the same as PL1 283W
that 4KW rating is the motherboard manufacturers way of saying Unlimited. Now that is of course still limited. For instance the PSU can probably provide something between 600W and 1.2KW so that's a limit, but more importantly the Voltage Regulation Module (VRM) on the motherboard provides the real limit in how much power can be sent to the CPU. Effectively that limits the possible power to something probably less than 400W, but even without that limit there are only so much power that the CPU can handle without blowing up. So you will never see the CPU draw 4KW. But limiting the CPU power to what Intel recommends is going to make sure it doesn't over heat as easily and probably will mean it will work for a longer time. Using the higher power options can make fail earlier, while at the recommended values it should still work fine in ten or even twenty years. Now you most probably won't want to use it in twenty years but not having it die suddenly is pretty nice.
Pl1 should be at 125 w
why do we need the igpu thou ??🤔
Quicksync. It's pretty good at speeding up multimedia functions in a number of apps like Resolve without using DGPU. Matters a lot less for gamers like he mentioned.
msi a620 gives me xmp options while its an amd motherboard
XMP and EXPO is essentially the same thing. But memory manufacturers can choose one of the other. The thing is EXPO values are targeted to support the memory controller in AMD processors while XMP is targeting Intel processors. The same things are handled, but they do have different capabilities. So while XMP memory settings can work on a AMD system it's not totally certain. Same with EXPO on intel platforms. The hard part is figuring out if the memory is really stable. It might sound simple but it really isn't.
There are of course the cases when the computer will crash immediately or not even load the OS before crashing. That's the easy situation.
Then you have the situation when the computer crashes after half an hour to ten hours. These are a bit harder to diagnose. Running a memory test program like Memtest86+ might or might not immediately find a memory problem like this. What's important to know is that just because every mem test you throw at the machine says it's fine does not mean it really is working as it should. Some years back I used to run Prime95 in torturetest mode configured to use max memory. This did quite often find any problematic memory within 24hours. Yes every machine I built, mostly servers, was stress tested for at least 24 hours before being delivered to the customer. If the machine has ECC memory you have to check the system log for ECC errors as really there shouldn't be any of those in a new machine.
But even that isn't a total guarantee that everything is perfectly stable. Still you have at least done what you can to test it.
Now if you find errors then it might be a memory module that's not perfect, or it might be that the XMP settings doesn't really work with AMD processors, or the memory controller on the CPU isn't perfect, or or the motherboard isn't good at handling faster memory and this can be this particular motherboard or the model of motherboard has a less than optimal design.
That's why I say memory problems can be tricky. Now when I fond a problem at work I could change the memory, the CPU the motherboard and usually in that order until the problem was solved. For a home user this is trickier.
@@blahorgaslisk7763 wow thats the best support info ive read ever, i was very lost on throu what was going on with this xmp at an am5.. ive been dealing with a lot of strange things such as guaranteed bsod on first boot, and stable work on second try everyday [just as if pc had to actually "warm up"] like a car or so, weird asf
XMP and EXPO are simply marketing that both companies use, you can use either regardless whether it's Intel or AMD.
@@darkoz1692 Correct, but the memory controllers behave a bit differently on AND and Intel processors. Generally the Intel processors supports higher RAM frequencies, so the XMP settings if programmed correctly may stress the memory more than what the memory controller on a AMD processor will handle.
That's part of what makes memory a tricky part whenever you start to push the performance. Now it's been ages, or at least fifteen years since I last tried to manually optimize memory performance. I can't even remember the names of all the settings so I just go with EMP or EXPO and don't bother trying to tighten the settings. But I do expect that when using memory that has the settings set for AMD or Intel it will work flawlessly. It doesn't always work that way but then it's either a faulty memory module or a processor that has a less than perfect memory controller. And yes, it happens that a processor is either better than standard or worse. That's why overclockers bin their processors to find the ones that will perform at higher speeds and tighter timings.
Hi sir, I am planning to buy Ryzen 9 7950x3d for my pc on July 5, 2024. Kindly do the needful by posting your review or give some comments about it.
Maybe just give the ram some juice
BIOS SETTING
sir that scared me
I’m too early
noob
Not a particularly good guide. You do not explain the term iGPU (internal GPU) and you misquote the RAM speed as 68000 instead of 6800. Downvoted.
igpu stands for integrated
Lol
@@timmyflewI like when fact-checkers are getting fact-checked. You made my day 😊