I just bought a 7600x and Asus B650e-e ROG Strix ($240 for both) and when I first posted my cpu would climb to 63c with a temporary Wraith Stealth cooler. Noticed cpu voltage stayed 1.440v in bios. I then realized the BIOS was the original late 2022 bios so I updated to the latest. Still noticed higher than usual voltage. Even though it’s the nicest board in the house feature wise I was thinking to keep it in a secondary role with the 7600x as I don’t trust it with my 7800x3D. My 3 other AM5 builds have x670 non E Aorus Elite AX and don’t appear to have the same high stock voltage. I plan to review this video in the future when I install this premium $350 b650e-e board.
Just letting you know, Intel adaptive boost technology is a feature of the cpu, it’s a good thing to have enabled. You have limits in place so it won’t go over the limit
This is correct. However, Asus motherboard unfortunately overrides it. So you have to make sure to turn off Asus's version of it. I have it disabled because I've been tweaking in other programs. When I'm not, I usually leave it on auto.
@@JxzzCat i think your confused. Asus doesnt override it. it works WITH MCE. no limits = chip will keep boosting. if you have limits then it will keep boosting until you hit those limits then it turns off.
@mikeh6423 maybe not for you, but many users have the asus multicore enhancement override their chips factory settings. Jayztwocents has also confirmed this is infact a thing. There are many factors- how old is your board, model type, exc. This has been a common issue with recent asus boards within the last 4-5 years. The primary issue is the wattage and the amps that it sets it to. It will override your chips factory safe settings and put a maximum of 4095 watts. Which can cause overheating and performance issues when underload. ruclips.net/video/s43Auv8ub7w/видео.htmlsi=ssDBVs9SodD870QW Heres a link to his video doing a better explanation. I made this video for a friend who was building his PC, and decided to just make it a small general tips video.
dude thank you so much! after doing these changes my processor temperature average dropped like 15 to 20 degrees (now stays at around 30 to 45c)! and my PC is now running way smoother. You rock!
@heymauriciosoares glad to hear it works for you! Yeah, I do these tweaks with all my pcs. Factory defaults are generally excessively hot for very few performance differences. These tweaks drop temperatures while maintaining performance. You're roughly only losing 1-3% performance at most. I'd rather take hardware longevity over 1-3%. (And makes your room less hot as well)
3:20 how for you find the manufacturing info? I tried to look up the info for a i3-3100 but I can’t. It’s running hit during games and my pc screen will go black, fans rev up very high and the computer will reset. What do I do?
Hi man! question: which is better for gaming: ¿3600mhz 16 20 20 38 gear on auto. with avg lat 76ns or 3200mhz 14 18 18 34 gear 1 avg 65ns lat? i have a new 32gb ram at 3600mhz(2 sticks at dual channel) but with my i3 13100f and my asrock b660m pro rs cant pass from 3200mhz with locked gear 1 (3400-3466 crash in games, 3600+crash on bios)pd: 1.35 dram v. (does not help if i go up to 1.40, with 1.45 system crash). btw good vid
so without getting into to much detail on how clocks work on RAM, your 3600 will be faster than 3200. but not by much. The big thing is you generally always want to run XMP profile I or XMP profile II Try not to manually set your clock speeds if you can avoid it. Whichever set runs XMP will be your absolute fastest pick.
@@JxzzCat everything i mentioned is with the xmp 2.0 profile activated. Ok so for gaming 3600 is better with the 77ns memory latency over 3200 with 65ns ml?
@@mugsete19 so think of it this way, 3600 transfers more amounts of data at a time, where it may be a bit slower at transferring, it's still transferring MORE data, at a barely reduced speed. Thus, it outclasses the 3200, because the volume of transferred data. If you're curious more on it, there are plenty of good videos explaining why this works like this. But to answer your question, the 3600 is faster.
@xsparky0168 it also helps reduce core throttling. Some applications like to overload 1-2 cores, which can spike temperatures and cause unreasonable stress on individual cores. Although it's not always needed, it can help in situations of overheating. And bad core performance.
where do i find the values for power and the core/cache limits? i checked the intel website for my specific cpu, and the only thing concerning power i see is the TDP and as for the cache it just says 6mb. i have an i5 7500 if that helps.
any tips or vids for i7 14700k? using 3080 and 850 PSU, with asus mobo z790-h strix.. 32gb ram ddr5.. been eexpeerieencing restarts when playing pubg Game steam, sometimes in diablo 4.. Event ID eerror Kernel 41 shows in eevent viewer :( seems my PSU is okay, its in CPU 14th gen issuee of stability I think.. pls help me! beeen 3 months of tweaking
@JsinJzone 13 and 14 gens are indeed having instability issues. If you haven't updated your bios via flash drive (download the update for your chip on intel or asus driver downloads) Do that first. After that. I'd strongly suggest bringing your adaptive voltage to offset negative at the very least 0.05 If these steps haven't worked, you can force all cores to perform together, which prevents singular spikes (which can cause issues) to do this, enable sync all cores. You can then set the values of all your cores. I just searches your chip, and it has boost clocks of 5.6ghz on proficiency cores and 4.3 on efficiency cores. I would suggest syncing all your profiency cores to 4.7ghz and efficiency cores to 3.8ghz. If things stabilize, you can increase these margins by .1 till you find a sweet spot between performance and stability. Hope this helps.
@@JxzzCat thanks, Did all of theesee and all areee updated eveen the drivers and BIOS. reformatted it too but still I get Reeboots in games especially when opening. months ago it works fine, couuld this be the CPU degredation? oxidation of 14th gen i7s? The reboots are getting worse
Can anybody help me pls I’ve been having this problem for a long time and I thought the problem was my thermal paste or my cooler and I just found ur video, I have rig strix z590-e, 3080ti intel i7 11th, my computer temperature is always on 95+ when I check or I try to benchmark, my short duration package is 4096 watts
@Itzwillmark are you 95c on idle? If that's the case, it means your AIO or cpu cooler is not seated correctly. I'd strongly suggest reapplying your thermal paste and making sure your cooler is firmly tightened. If you mean 95c during a benchmark test, that's very normal, depending on the level of the bench intensity. There are ways to cool down your cores by reducing their clock speeds and reducing voltage, but if you're 95c idle, it means your cooler isn't working at all.
@@JxzzCat thank u so much for the info, it actually helped, I tightened my cooler and boom, all along I was thinking the problem was in the bios tho Ive had done everything I could, again thx u saved me
i tried some of the things you said to do in this video and the after i saved and exited bios it told me it started running in safe mode and i hade to press f1 to continue so i did, then i disabled a few and it is refusing to boot into windows now, i had to the bios back to default setting for it to even boot into windows
Don’t change anything apart from xmp profile to 1 or 2 apart from that don’t change anything else plus he might have a different cpu to u with all the extra stuff he doing
Can you, please, do video for ASUS new version 2.22.1284 2023AMI? Its not exactly the same. I think they just renamed few things and some are not in same location.
I don't have access to the new version on my computer, sadly. I'm not a tech channel, nor do I do youtube for income, so I unfortunately wouldn't be able to tweak the 2.22.1284 ami as it is bios designed for x670 boards. Even if I were to force update my bios, I don't think I'd be able to get the same results. I plan on building a brand new pc in November with all modern hardware and will be doing a full custom optimization for the entire rig. That's the soonest I can, sorry :( (I have one PC and don't have access to many things)
very bad mothermboard with shitty vrms, you have to add vrm cooling heatsinks or fans for vrm zone, if you want to i7 not throttle(due to overheat of vrm zone)!
Brother, I have an i3 10105f (and I bought an i5 11400f) what settings should I make? Config: i3 10105f 32GB RAM 3200mhz RX 6600 Eagle Asus Prime H510M- A SSD Nvme 512Gb m.2 Gamemax 600W 80 plus bronze (I have a great quality 240mm water cooler too and great cooling on the PC, but I don't want to overclock or anything like that).
@hefestionaga depends. These are the clock speeds. Going higher means hotter temperatures. If you can run yours at 5.2 with good temps, do so. My pc struggled to stay cooler than 72c on a liquid loop, so I dropped mine down to x49
@@hefestionaga ah, i see what you're talking about. It's because I'm using a program called XMP (intel extreme memory profile) to force the frequency lower
@hefestionaga yeah, anti cheat software in games causes temporary cpu throttling. I hate anticheat software. It always bogs things down and makes things run poorly.
@MartinsD12 if your games are freezing, you may be undervolting too much. Make sure the adaptive offset is set to at a maximum 0.05 Make sure you are not doing 0.5 If this is still having issues, I'd remove the offset entirely or drop it lower to 0.02 If you are not using any tweaks, make sure intel adaptive boost is turned on. As well as bios optimize.
@Shadingss it depends on your cpu. Some are able to reach such numbers. Example: the intel I9 12900k can safely get up to 5.2 ghz before it starts getting too hot (going above this would be extreme overclocking) 4.9x is below the stock defaults of the I9 12900k, so this, although it lowers its power, also lowers its temperatures drastically. You generally will not see a performance hit in the 4-5 ghz (the lower end of 4ghz, you'll start noticing a difference.) The best way to know what is safe for your chip is to find the factory set ghz, then drop it .1-.4 ghz, to reduce temperature and undervolt (if you need the cooldown), if you don't need the cooldown, I would not mess with this.
@@JxzzCat thank you. I have a 12400f with a b660m motherboard, runs at 3.9 ghz but goes up to 4.4 on some when needed, I was just going to see if I could make it do a bit more, I’ve seen videos of people getting up to 5.2 however I didn’t want to push it that much. (With b660 combo you can oc f chip) I just recently put on my new cpu cooler (hyper212 black rbg) on hwmonitor my temps currently stay around 30 idle and 52 degrees Celsius when on cinnebenchr23 with a score around 6000 and the pc is almost silent.. it’s like I’m not getting the power for some reason, but my cpu says 100% on task manager and I don’t exactly know the problem. Is my CPU just bad/faulty? Do I have too much air flow now? Maybe something is off in bios??
Also just to add a bit more info, when I game, it plays fine, however 100% cpu usage on games like Once Human, (Low settings 80fps) Spectre Divide ( low settings 300fps)and like 60-70% Valorant 300fps low settings
@Shadingss I will tell you right now, once human is one of the most poorly optimized pieces of shit out on the market, it runs so poorly that I decided to uninstall it. It places heavy load- all asset and player loading on to the CPU, and does not allocate any rendering to your graphics card. I used to work in the game industry as an environmental artist; I can tell you right now that most Asian developers do not know how to optimize unreal games. They've recently adopted the use of it with very little to any knowledge of how to use it correctly. This is why you'll see a lot of western launches run very smoothly on unreal engine 4 and 5, where eastern launches almost always launch with the same two issues - bad fps, bad stutters. It has so many shader cache issues, as well as hard asset culling. It is one of the worst unreal launches in the past 5 years. Unless you are playing with a giga $5000+ pc, you're going to notice horrible fps and stutters. People who watch videos like mine are not the same as normal players. You're here because you like perfection and love a perfect smooth screen with fast frames and no stutters. The general gaming public is okay with 60 fps on 1080p monitors that don't even know what stutters are. I thought about making a video om the current state of the gaming industry, and why games launch so unfunctuonably bad these days compared to the past but it'd be over an hour long, and I don't really do scripts. I just wing it. (I have the mouth of a sailor and would have some harsh words for current game developers)
@Shadingss so cpu 100% is not a bad thing to see. It just means your cpu is using all its power to perform the tasks it's told to do. The only downside to 100% power means if you start trying to load up other apps or tools, it'll start to slow down. You can safely overclock up to 4.2 ghz, as long as your PC can maintain the bump in temperature. (Also, it sounds like your cpu is idling at lower ghz to reduce temperature, which is a good thing) Like I was mentioning in my other comment to you, a lot of games these days (especially eastern developed games on unreal) are poorly optimized and have no understanding of shader cache, render distance culling, and asset forced gpu rendering. I almost feel like I should do a follow up video because a lot of people are being tricked to think their pcs are bad, when it's actually just a shit load of poorly developed and optimized games that keep releasing. I used to work in game design as an environmental artist. So it pisses me off to no end with how much slop is being pumped out in the last 6 years.
your +3.3v and +5.0v voltage is not good it gets lower than what it should be. by the way on the top there is maximum cpu temp so u can set it to what u want and just leave the cpu take what wattage it needed for best performance but TEMP LIMITED
@yxon1ph it depends on your motherboard. It's not something you can change manually. Could also be related to if you're currently updated version of vios.
@Poetry4Us auto allows it to fluctuate. This means it can rise or lower based on what it determines the appropriate amount of voltage needed. This is generally the best way to have it set, but it can cause extra heat for no reason. Adaptive voltage is to force lower voltage draw, for massive reduction in temperatures with little to no impact on performance.
i have i7 9700 intel , i have it at manual voltage 1.289 and svid voltage at 1.1, im runnning constant at 1.28 voltage, 43 * celcius in idle and around 55-60*celcius in workload gaming , how do i make my voltage be from 0.8 - 1.289 fluctuate, should i set to adaptive negative offset? or offset negative , im on syn call cores xmp1 , with all cstate disabled etc,,,, i have ocd and im obsssved with the voltage settings, i do like having it run on 1.28 voltage non stop , but i kinda want it to move from 0.8 -1.29 sometimes
@GwapitoEmon sounds like you're running at incredible cool temperatures. If nothing feels off, no need to tweak. However, with how much thermal room, you could consider overlocking. I could give advice on safe levels of overclocking. But I'd need to know what cpu you're using first.
@@JxzzCat Thanks for the reply. I just saw in my Asus bios that the settings was almost the same as yours. I think Asus already updated their setting the time that I updated the bios few months ago therefore I am getting a good results in temperature.
@@JxzzCat thats the only downside. My mobo does not support overclocking eventhough my cpu can be overclocked. Here are some info: Asus Prime B660M-A WiFi DDR4 LGA1700 mATX Desktop Motherboard Cpu: Intel 12th Gen Core i5-12400F 6 Cores 12 Threads 4.4GHz Processor
@A-185gaming10 ez mode is just a quick way to use factory overclocking. (There should be a button that says advance options to get you to more details) You can use it safely as long as your PC can handle the temperatures. My guide is for people like me who can't stand seeing temperatures to high for low results. I've heard the new asus 670 boards also have a new layout, I sadly won't be able to know how to navigate it till I build my new pc with one in November
@nugget6701 yes and no. This is what I would classify as underclocking. However, you can apply these tips to defeninitly overclock if that was something you cared to do manually. Just be careful, make sure you have plenty of thermal headroom and know what your cpu limits are.
@gamingfromjohnwayne it overclocks the integrated GPU if you have one to increase performance. It's useless if you have an installed graphics card. The only benefit from it is if, for some reason, you don't have a graphics card.
@Jarrahfe glad to hear that! Not everything ages accordingly. Still has some good tips like adaptive undervolting. I'll be making a new video going over some of the changes and tips to people still struggling with intel 13k and 14k chips. I'll be swapping to AMD next month as well to expand my knowledge so it's not just intel.
Not you probably have a amd processor just select docp standard and then below docp should state a speed “D.O.C.P ddr4-xxxx” set your memory requency to be at the xxxx number or below otherwise it will use default which is usually a lot lower
Yes, your tip works nice for me, on a 13900k..z790 Asus boay..my Amp is at 307 and pl1-2 253 as recommended eg Cyberpunk runs around 52-54 GHz at 144 hz very smooth
For the longest time I was running the 4095 watts because I didn't know. I always struggled with thermal throttling because of it on my I9 12900k I have a full liquid loop, and it was driving me crazy. After learning this fix, it improved everything for me greatly. I learned it from scouring tech forums, but jayztwocents also has a really good video on it as well! But he only talks about the asus problem.
@@JxzzCat Yes correct, Jayz sometimes only explains what is but not enough, I have a lot of respect for him tho..and to be honest, Intel motherboards will have power set to high ,ya just got to do some tweaking on your own..but like anything eg Intel CPU and Ram Graphics cards can be overclock, however will be set to standard, to safe gard there own products and a law suit
I just bought a 7600x and Asus B650e-e ROG Strix ($240 for both) and when I first posted my cpu would climb to 63c with a temporary Wraith Stealth cooler. Noticed cpu voltage stayed 1.440v in bios. I then realized the BIOS was the original late 2022 bios so I updated to the latest. Still noticed higher than usual voltage. Even though it’s the nicest board in the house feature wise I was thinking to keep it in a secondary role with the 7600x as I don’t trust it with my 7800x3D. My 3 other AM5 builds have x670 non E Aorus Elite AX and don’t appear to have the same high stock voltage.
I plan to review this video in the future when I install this premium $350 b650e-e board.
OMG at lastttt for a years i found video same bios mobo like me i search for a years. I glad found you keep it up for optimization
Just letting you know, Intel adaptive boost technology is a feature of the cpu, it’s a good thing to have enabled. You have limits in place so it won’t go over the limit
This is correct. However, Asus motherboard unfortunately overrides it. So you have to make sure to turn off Asus's version of it.
I have it disabled because I've been tweaking in other programs. When I'm not, I usually leave it on auto.
@@JxzzCat i think your confused. Asus doesnt override it. it works WITH MCE. no limits = chip will keep boosting. if you have limits then it will keep boosting until you hit those limits then it turns off.
Yes, I have the i913900k using a Asus Z790 and your tip helped for sure
@mikeh6423 maybe not for you, but many users have the asus multicore enhancement override their chips factory settings. Jayztwocents has also confirmed this is infact a thing. There are many factors- how old is your board, model type, exc. This has been a common issue with recent asus boards within the last 4-5 years.
The primary issue is the wattage and the amps that it sets it to. It will override your chips factory safe settings and put a maximum of 4095 watts. Which can cause overheating and performance issues when underload.
ruclips.net/video/s43Auv8ub7w/видео.htmlsi=ssDBVs9SodD870QW
Heres a link to his video doing a better explanation. I made this video for a friend who was building his PC, and decided to just make it a small general tips video.
@@mikeh6423 you got humbled lol
make sure ya'll keep the Voltage offset to 0.05, not 0.5
Okay but why can u say the answer
0.5 is way too much to the point it can probably cause ur windows to crash since it's 0.50 and not 0.05@subsccribefourn0reasenples3
@ the way you say it makes it sound confusing.. FYI to any passers by; ensure your voltage offset does not go higher than 0.05, 0.5 us way too high
Get a cheap adjustable tripod and phone adapter that way you could record this framed up better. Would cost you about $30 and comes in very handy.
I appreciate the advice, I just propped my phone up on the desk, haha...
dude thank you so much! after doing these changes my processor temperature average dropped like 15 to 20 degrees (now stays at around 30 to 45c)! and my PC is now running way smoother. You rock!
@heymauriciosoares glad to hear it works for you! Yeah, I do these tweaks with all my pcs. Factory defaults are generally excessively hot for very few performance differences. These tweaks drop temperatures while maintaining performance. You're roughly only losing 1-3% performance at most. I'd rather take hardware longevity over 1-3%. (And makes your room less hot as well)
3:20 how for you find the manufacturing info? I tried to look up the info for a i3-3100 but I can’t. It’s running hit during games and my pc screen will go black, fans rev up very high and the computer will reset. What do I do?
warning voltage offset is always 0.05000 or 0.07000 and never 0.5000 or 0.7000 dont forget that always 0.0 something
@@marcosavila8215 yup! Gotta add that zero. You can sometimes get away with 0.1, but even that is pushing limits. I'd go no further than 0.12
@@JxzzCat Isn't the offset setting should be for Global core SVID voltage and not VRM core voltage?
@@CliffgamerzYes, he’s not using the correct field
Hi man! question: which is better for gaming: ¿3600mhz 16 20 20 38 gear on auto. with avg lat 76ns or 3200mhz 14 18 18 34 gear 1 avg 65ns lat? i have a new 32gb ram at 3600mhz(2 sticks at dual channel) but with my i3 13100f and my asrock b660m pro rs cant pass from 3200mhz with locked gear 1 (3400-3466 crash in games, 3600+crash on bios)pd: 1.35 dram v. (does not help if i go up to 1.40, with 1.45 system crash). btw good vid
so without getting into to much detail on how clocks work on RAM, your 3600 will be faster than 3200. but not by much. The big thing is you generally always want to run XMP profile I or XMP profile II
Try not to manually set your clock speeds if you can avoid it.
Whichever set runs XMP will be your absolute fastest pick.
@@JxzzCat everything i mentioned is with the xmp 2.0 profile activated. Ok so for gaming 3600 is better with the 77ns memory latency over 3200 with 65ns ml?
@@mugsete19 so think of it this way, 3600 transfers more amounts of data at a time, where it may be a bit slower at transferring, it's still transferring MORE data, at a barely reduced speed. Thus, it outclasses the 3200, because the volume of transferred data.
If you're curious more on it, there are plenty of good videos explaining why this works like this.
But to answer your question, the 3600 is faster.
what the difference between actual vrm core voltage and global core svid voltage? which one do i choose or better
xmp 2 is the proper one, since its the dimm's default
and syncing cores is probably the best way to fight unwanted voltage+cpu degradation
@xsparky0168 it also helps reduce core throttling. Some applications like to overload 1-2 cores, which can spike temperatures and cause unreasonable stress on individual cores. Although it's not always needed, it can help in situations of overheating. And bad core performance.
@@JxzzCat You confuse OC-Tuner I and II with XMP I and II.
where do i find the values for power and the core/cache limits? i checked the intel website for my specific cpu, and the only thing concerning power i see is the TDP and as for the cache it just says 6mb. i have an i5 7500 if that helps.
I got a asus tuf a520m plus ii, ryzen 4600g 2x16 ram geil potenza with xmp , But in DOCP/XMP in bios it shows only disabled option wth?
any tips or vids for i7 14700k? using 3080 and 850 PSU, with asus mobo z790-h strix.. 32gb ram ddr5.. been eexpeerieencing restarts when playing pubg Game steam, sometimes in diablo 4.. Event ID eerror Kernel 41 shows in eevent viewer :( seems my PSU is okay, its in CPU 14th gen issuee of stability I think.. pls help me! beeen 3 months of tweaking
@JsinJzone 13 and 14 gens are indeed having instability issues. If you haven't updated your bios via flash drive (download the update for your chip on intel or asus driver downloads)
Do that first. After that. I'd strongly suggest bringing your adaptive voltage to offset negative at the very least 0.05
If these steps haven't worked, you can force all cores to perform together, which prevents singular spikes (which can cause issues) to do this, enable sync all cores. You can then set the values of all your cores.
I just searches your chip, and it has boost clocks of 5.6ghz on proficiency cores and 4.3 on efficiency cores.
I would suggest syncing all your profiency cores to 4.7ghz and efficiency cores to 3.8ghz.
If things stabilize, you can increase these margins by .1 till you find a sweet spot between performance and stability.
Hope this helps.
@@JxzzCat thanks, Did all of theesee and all areee updated eveen the drivers and BIOS. reformatted it too but still I get Reeboots in games especially when opening. months ago it works fine, couuld this be the CPU degredation? oxidation of 14th gen i7s? The reboots are getting worse
Can anybody help me pls I’ve been having this problem for a long time and I thought the problem was my thermal paste or my cooler and I just found ur video, I have rig strix z590-e, 3080ti intel i7 11th, my computer temperature is always on 95+ when I check or I try to benchmark, my short duration package is 4096 watts
@Itzwillmark are you 95c on idle? If that's the case, it means your AIO or cpu cooler is not seated correctly. I'd strongly suggest reapplying your thermal paste and making sure your cooler is firmly tightened.
If you mean 95c during a benchmark test, that's very normal, depending on the level of the bench intensity.
There are ways to cool down your cores by reducing their clock speeds and reducing voltage, but if you're 95c idle, it means your cooler isn't working at all.
@@JxzzCat thank u so much for the info, it actually helped, I tightened my cooler and boom, all along I was thinking the problem was in the bios tho Ive had done everything I could, again thx u saved me
Why my sata hard drive not show,but in advanced mode it use normal to go to folder
Brother what should i set this , Intel i7 12700k default CPU core/cache current limit value?
Why my hdd not show on boot bios ,but still acess in ez mode still see file folder in bios
i tried some of the things you said to do in this video and the after i saved and exited bios it told me it started running in safe mode and i hade to press f1 to continue so i did, then i disabled a few and it is refusing to boot into windows now, i had to the bios back to default setting for it to even boot into windows
Don’t change anything apart from xmp profile to 1 or 2 apart from that don’t change anything else plus he might have a different cpu to u with all the extra stuff he doing
Can you, please, do video for ASUS new version 2.22.1284 2023AMI? Its not exactly the same. I think they just renamed few things and some are not in same location.
I don't have access to the new version on my computer, sadly. I'm not a tech channel, nor do I do youtube for income, so I unfortunately wouldn't be able to tweak the 2.22.1284 ami as it is bios designed for x670 boards.
Even if I were to force update my bios, I don't think I'd be able to get the same results.
I plan on building a brand new pc in November with all modern hardware and will be doing a full custom optimization for the entire rig.
That's the soonest I can, sorry :(
(I have one PC and don't have access to many things)
How did you change your voltage for the cpu/cache thing it doesn’t let me change the number ?
I have an Asus h510m-A, i7-11700, 2x 8gb 2666, 2060 super and a 750w source, can I copy the same video settings?
very bad mothermboard with shitty vrms, you have to add vrm cooling heatsinks or fans for vrm zone, if you want to i7 not throttle(due to overheat of vrm zone)!
Brother, I have an i3 10105f (and I bought an i5 11400f) what settings should I make?
Config:
i3 10105f
32GB RAM 3200mhz
RX 6600 Eagle
Asus Prime H510M- A
SSD Nvme 512Gb m.2
Gamemax 600W 80 plus bronze
(I have a great quality 240mm water cooler too and great cooling on the PC, but I don't want to overclock or anything like that).
wheres high memery bandwith i cant find it on my bios not sure if asus has it
why it says your ratio is x49 if the i9 12900KF is 5.2? shouldnt it says x52?
@hefestionaga depends. These are the clock speeds. Going higher means hotter temperatures. If you can run yours at 5.2 with good temps, do so. My pc struggled to stay cooler than 72c on a liquid loop, so I dropped mine down to x49
@JxzzCat right, but im so confused, on the video you did let that at auto and on the right says 49? auto should be 52 no?
@@hefestionaga ah, i see what you're talking about. It's because I'm using a program called XMP (intel extreme memory profile) to force the frequency lower
@@JxzzCat got it, thanks for so fast answering! i just had to lower from 54 to 52 my 13700KF to stop riot games vanguard from BSOD me hahaha
@hefestionaga yeah, anti cheat software in games causes temporary cpu throttling.
I hate anticheat software. It always bogs things down and makes things run poorly.
can some summarize in one picture? btw when i updated bios i got freezes on my games now...
@MartinsD12 if your games are freezing, you may be undervolting too much. Make sure the adaptive offset is set to at a maximum 0.05 Make sure you are not doing 0.5
If this is still having issues, I'd remove the offset entirely or drop it lower to 0.02
If you are not using any tweaks, make sure intel adaptive boost is turned on. As well as bios optimize.
How did you get the frequency up to 4900 or in other words your ratio is 49x, how can I change that number
@Shadingss it depends on your cpu. Some are able to reach such numbers. Example: the intel I9 12900k can safely get up to 5.2 ghz before it starts getting too hot (going above this would be extreme overclocking)
4.9x is below the stock defaults of the I9 12900k, so this, although it lowers its power, also lowers its temperatures drastically. You generally will not see a performance hit in the 4-5 ghz (the lower end of 4ghz, you'll start noticing a difference.)
The best way to know what is safe for your chip is to find the factory set ghz, then drop it .1-.4 ghz, to reduce temperature and undervolt (if you need the cooldown), if you don't need the cooldown, I would not mess with this.
@@JxzzCat thank you. I have a 12400f with a b660m motherboard, runs at 3.9 ghz but goes up to 4.4 on some when needed, I was just going to see if I could make it do a bit more, I’ve seen videos of people getting up to 5.2 however I didn’t want to push it that much. (With b660 combo you can oc f chip)
I just recently put on my new cpu cooler (hyper212 black rbg) on hwmonitor my temps currently stay around 30 idle and 52 degrees Celsius when on cinnebenchr23 with a score around 6000 and the pc is almost silent.. it’s like I’m not getting the power for some reason, but my cpu says 100% on task manager and I don’t exactly know the problem. Is my CPU just bad/faulty? Do I have too much air flow now? Maybe something is off in bios??
Also just to add a bit more info, when I game, it plays fine, however 100% cpu usage on games like Once Human, (Low settings 80fps) Spectre Divide ( low settings 300fps)and like 60-70% Valorant 300fps low settings
@Shadingss I will tell you right now, once human is one of the most poorly optimized pieces of shit out on the market, it runs so poorly that I decided to uninstall it.
It places heavy load- all asset and player loading on to the CPU, and does not allocate any rendering to your graphics card. I used to work in the game industry as an environmental artist; I can tell you right now that most Asian developers do not know how to optimize unreal games. They've recently adopted the use of it with very little to any knowledge of how to use it correctly.
This is why you'll see a lot of western launches run very smoothly on unreal engine 4 and 5, where eastern launches almost always launch with the same two issues - bad fps, bad stutters.
It has so many shader cache issues, as well as hard asset culling. It is one of the worst unreal launches in the past 5 years. Unless you are playing with a giga $5000+ pc, you're going to notice horrible fps and stutters.
People who watch videos like mine are not the same as normal players. You're here because you like perfection and love a perfect smooth screen with fast frames and no stutters.
The general gaming public is okay with 60 fps on 1080p monitors that don't even know what stutters are.
I thought about making a video om the current state of the gaming industry, and why games launch so unfunctuonably bad these days compared to the past but it'd be over an hour long, and I don't really do scripts. I just wing it. (I have the mouth of a sailor and would have some harsh words for current game developers)
@Shadingss so cpu 100% is not a bad thing to see. It just means your cpu is using all its power to perform the tasks it's told to do. The only downside to 100% power means if you start trying to load up other apps or tools, it'll start to slow down.
You can safely overclock up to 4.2 ghz, as long as your PC can maintain the bump in temperature. (Also, it sounds like your cpu is idling at lower ghz to reduce temperature, which is a good thing)
Like I was mentioning in my other comment to you, a lot of games these days (especially eastern developed games on unreal) are poorly optimized and have no understanding of shader cache, render distance culling, and asset forced gpu rendering. I almost feel like I should do a follow up video because a lot of people are being tricked to think their pcs are bad, when it's actually just a shit load of poorly developed and optimized games that keep releasing.
I used to work in game design as an environmental artist. So it pisses me off to no end with how much slop is being pumped out in the last 6 years.
im running ryzen 5 3600 on b450m-A ii i want to safely clock my cpu to its 4.2 comes stock 3.6. Can anyone assist me with this thank you .
Thank you was getting crazy lag on cyberpunk after bios update, now its flawless again. Thank you!
your +3.3v and +5.0v voltage is not good it gets lower than what it should be. by the way on the top there is maximum cpu temp so u can set it to what u want and just leave the cpu take what wattage it needed for best performance but TEMP LIMITED
the expo profile is only for intel user if you have a amd cpu you must use expo profile
This comment makes no sense.. "expo profile is only for intel, so if you have AMD you must use expo profile"?
@@CrypticFable1think he should have said xmp for Intel, expo for AMD lol
@@Takeme_DCUO yeah I gotcha, probably a language barrier I would guess! It’s all good
@@CrypticFable1😅👍
Many good advices
how to change color of bios to blue from red?
@yxon1ph it depends on your motherboard. It's not something you can change manually. Could also be related to if you're currently updated version of vios.
asir long and short package power limit for i9 10900k?
754 watts.
i left my core voltage offset at (auto , instead of 0.05) what u think the auto is giving me
@Poetry4Us auto allows it to fluctuate. This means it can rise or lower based on what it determines the appropriate amount of voltage needed. This is generally the best way to have it set, but it can cause extra heat for no reason. Adaptive voltage is to force lower voltage draw, for massive reduction in temperatures with little to no impact on performance.
i have i7 9700 intel , i have it at manual voltage 1.289 and svid voltage at 1.1, im runnning constant at 1.28 voltage, 43 * celcius in idle and around 55-60*celcius in workload gaming , how do i make my voltage be from 0.8 - 1.289 fluctuate, should i set to adaptive negative offset? or offset negative , im on syn call cores xmp1 , with all cstate disabled etc,,,, i have ocd and im obsssved with the voltage settings, i do like having it run on 1.28 voltage non stop , but i kinda want it to move from 0.8 -1.29 sometimes
Hi I don’t have the weaker why?
I got around 28-30 degrees when idle and 36 degrees on heavy gaming. These was on auto / default settings.
Should I still tweak my settings?
@GwapitoEmon sounds like you're running at incredible cool temperatures. If nothing feels off, no need to tweak.
However, with how much thermal room, you could consider overlocking.
I could give advice on safe levels of overclocking. But I'd need to know what cpu you're using first.
@@JxzzCat Thanks for the reply. I just saw in my Asus bios that the settings was almost the same as yours. I think Asus already updated their setting the time that I updated the bios few months ago therefore I am getting a good results in temperature.
@@JxzzCat thats the only downside. My mobo does not support overclocking eventhough my cpu can be overclocked. Here are some info:
Asus Prime B660M-A WiFi DDR4 LGA1700 mATX Desktop Motherboard
Cpu: Intel 12th Gen Core i5-12400F 6 Cores 12 Threads 4.4GHz Processor
i have asus but the layout is different i have this thing aclled ez mode
@A-185gaming10 ez mode is just a quick way to use factory overclocking. (There should be a button that says advance options to get you to more details) You can use it safely as long as your PC can handle the temperatures. My guide is for people like me who can't stand seeing temperatures to high for low results.
I've heard the new asus 670 boards also have a new layout, I sadly won't be able to know how to navigate it till I build my new pc with one in November
Best tutorials there is. 👌
Is this overclocking ?
@nugget6701 yes and no. This is what I would classify as underclocking.
However, you can apply these tips to defeninitly overclock if that was something you cared to do manually.
Just be careful, make sure you have plenty of thermal headroom and know what your cpu limits are.
What is gpu boost in bios ?
@gamingfromjohnwayne it overclocks the integrated GPU if you have one to increase performance. It's useless if you have an installed graphics card.
The only benefit from it is if, for some reason, you don't have a graphics card.
@@JxzzCat thanks man! Love channel ❤️
7 months of this video, I recommend to not follow 100% of the video because intel fixed lot of things on bios
@Jarrahfe glad to hear that! Not everything ages accordingly. Still has some good tips like adaptive undervolting.
I'll be making a new video going over some of the changes and tips to people still struggling with intel 13k and 14k chips.
I'll be swapping to AMD next month as well to expand my knowledge so it's not just intel.
I have D.O.C.P. when I click on Ai Overclock Tuner is that a problem and I don’t find anything u show in the vid on my bios ?
Not you probably have a amd processor just select docp standard and then below docp should state a speed “D.O.C.P ddr4-xxxx” set your memory requency to be at the xxxx number or below otherwise it will use default which is usually a lot lower
Nice i did this and my pc is not turning on
I have asus but don’t have Ai tweaker
update your bios
Yes, your tip works nice for me, on a 13900k..z790 Asus boay..my Amp is at 307 and pl1-2 253 as recommended eg Cyberpunk runs around 52-54 GHz at 144 hz very smooth
For the longest time I was running the 4095 watts because I didn't know. I always struggled with thermal throttling because of it on my I9 12900k
I have a full liquid loop, and it was driving me crazy. After learning this fix, it improved everything for me greatly. I learned it from scouring tech forums, but jayztwocents also has a really good video on it as well! But he only talks about the asus problem.
@@JxzzCat Yes correct, Jayz sometimes only explains what is but not enough, I have a lot of respect for him tho..and to be honest, Intel motherboards will have power set to high ,ya just got to do some tweaking on your own..but like anything eg Intel CPU and Ram Graphics cards can be overclock, however will be set to standard, to safe gard there own products and a law suit
Use a captured video and duplicate the screen so you can record it digitally on another device 👍✅
I didn’t see xmp1 on mine I have asus z590-p
ur is gonna be called D.O.C.P its the same as XMI just has a different name
Can someone help me
I wanna disable the integrated grafics 🥲