I've never heard of this before, it looks like it is intended for ultra small all-in-ones and ultra books. I've personally never heard of a issue with this when people try and overclock.open wrote:Not true. The embedded controller, the intel thermal dynamic framework, and even the operating system can chose to throttle the cpu from any number of conditions.
Moving up can be good if you want to maybe graph the voltage wall like i did or just figure out what the best setting is for everything but this guy is super impatient and doesn't read half the posts and going up does take much longer. If you just throw it onto the max voltage you're willing to push 1.3/1.35 and then just work down you're going to find your max a lot quicker.open wrote:Yes it is because its best to start low. The guy that didn't know what his 4 core turbo speed was isn't going to want to push 4.8ghz right away. Start low and move upward... ...If he starts with +200mhz and a light underclock he should be golden and can go from there.
He's got a "gigabyte z170, H3DP or something" and "Im watercooled btw, and 2 fans" so think he's good
If you start with a undervolt and a +200mhz that's going to take forever, idk why anyone would do that.
The mobos set the voltages and the obvious problem is the one i talked about before, when you have relative voltage it's near impossible to gain any useful information about that, every post you look up is not going to be comparable to you because you picked relative and not absolute. I could see him pushing 200mv+ only for his voltage to reach 1.45 and for him to not know because he wont properly test with prime95. If you're going to do it, just learn that your stock is around 1.2/1.25 and don't go above 1.3 unless your cooler can handle it.open wrote:It honestly doesn't even matter if you use relative or absolute. Its trial and error no matter what. And I recommend relative for beginners because its easier and will take into account what voltage their processor came set to to begin with.
That's your BLCK, it does that.98.89 etc 99.99 instead of staying at 100.00?
If you get a adaptive sync monitor like G-Sync it will help out a lot. You computer will always 'lag' no matter what. you can make the spikes less minimal but perfect doesn't exist when you'e running uncapped framerate.But I still get stuttering in certain maps etc (cache, cuz it takes more fps) i dont understand why....my pc really shouldnt lag
I've answered that multiple times.if I ¸go 4.4ghz any recommandation for static voltage to try? any classic coltage for these or 4.5ghz?
I've told you before that if you don't test with prime it's completely useless information.My temps at 4.2 never exceed 35 degree cpu and 38 motherboard (motherboard usually around 32)