03-02-2019 03:49 PM - last edited 3 weeks ago by ROGBot
03-02-2019 11:06 PM
03-03-2019 09:39 AM
Arne Saknussemm wrote:
The offset values mean nothing...it's the actual voltage values that would make some sense
But if that's all on the same BIOS then it seems there is significant degradation.
By the way the RVE wont kill anything...unless you tell it to
03-03-2019 10:10 AM
03-03-2019 10:34 AM
Arne Saknussemm wrote:
Intel warranty is for stock only...if it needed more voltage to run at stock you could send it back...assuming it's still in warranty period...you can check that at Intel site
I'd try "aliens" first and then own up if that doesn't work...:rolleyes:
03-27-2019 01:11 AM
04-03-2019 05:32 AM
Vlada011 wrote:
People usually push processors to their end from start and later become unstable.
Ideal OC for Haswell-E is 4.2-4.3GHz maybe. Not 4.5-4.6GHz... that couldn't last long.
Better to run processors on stock speed first, than after 1-2 years little OC and before you change platform when CPU is few years old to drain last MHz from him.
People are too much occupied with benchmark results and Intel's sponsored reviews about improvement of every new generation.
In real life you can't see difference between I7-5960X on 4.3GHz or 4.5GHz, and sometimes voltage need for that is huge.
Find sweet spot for normal voltage 1200V-1250V and that's it. everything above is risky.
People write in signature frequency capable to boot PC or finish Cinebench, and other think that's their 24/7 stable clock.
Some new Intel processors are pushed so much and only Turbo Frequency is enough. Haswell-E need OC, serious, there is a lot of space but people go to far.
Why not reflesh BIOS with some older version, clear cmos and run everything on default first 1-2 week, later OC CPU on 4.0GHz on default voltage.