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10-31-2012 09:01 AM #11
Arne Saknussemm PC Specs Laptop (Model) Laptop?...No way! (Model?...Jun Amaki...yes way!) Motherboard ROG ZENITH II EXTREME Processor THREADRIPPER 3960X Memory (part number) TXBD48G4000HC18FBK Graphics Card #1 GTX Titan X Graphics Card #2 SLI is dead to me Graphics Card #3 Tri SLI is even dead to Nvidia Graphics Card #4 Quad SLI is dead to everybody especially my credit card Sound Card Xonar Essence STX Monitor ASUS ROG Swift PG279Q Storage #1 Samsung 970/960/950 PRO Storage #2 2x OCZ VERTEX 3/2x WD Caviar Black 500GB / 2x WD RED 2TB/Samsung 1TBSSDs CPU Cooler Custom Loop: Dual D5s, Dual Alphacool Monsta 480s, XSPC Raystorm Neo TR4, EK TitanX WaterBlock Case Nope!...Dimastech Easy XL...let it all hang out man! Power Supply Seasonic 1000 Platinum Keyboard Corsair Strafe MK2 ROG Claymore... or Fender Rhodes Electric Piano (MKI 73) Mouse Corsair M65Pro or Speedy Gonzalez...not Mickey...don't do Disney! Headset ...firmly on neck Mouse Pad Mouse don't got his own pad man...lives with me Headset/Speakers Edifier Spinnaker...or you mean the speakers in my head...man too many voices to name them all OS Win XP, 7, 8, 8.1 and Windows 10 Spyware Edition Network Router 56k modem Accessory #1 Umm...nice tie? Accessory #2 Err...belt? Accessory #3 3 accessories?! I'm not a girl!!
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Your problem, I suspect, is in too much Vcore! An offset voltage of .120 for a mild overclock is, I think, too much. The VRM should always be actively cooled overclocking...this is what you have shown in your pic not PCH.
For 4.4 try the minimum offset of 0.005 or even -0.005 should work
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10-31-2012 10:22 AM #12
Oh yeah, you guys are talking about the VRM (that heatsink above the CPU), as Arne said... the PCH/South Bridge is lower, below the graphics card, and has not too much to do with prime95 stressing...
Overheating the VRM can and will cause throttling... so, as stated before, it needs adequate cooling... The main drawback of using a closed-loop cooling system is that the VRM region will loose the airflow. So you need to do some adjustment to prevent that... the easiest way to get a nice airflow on the VRMs, is to change the direction of the airflow on the top and/or rear fans... doing it on the top fans actually may be better, but depends on the case...
In the present situation, the radiator/fan setup bulges too much into the case... it covers some heatsink on the left of the CPU, which is connected, I believe, to the main VRM heatsink through a heatpipe - so it's an important part of the VRM cooling... having it covered, meaning no airflow... I would try to mount the radiator directly on the chassis and the rearmost fan place outside...
After that, if the top fans are aready sucking in the fresh air, you can try to mount on them a deflector to redirect the air toward the VRM heatsink... You can leave the rear rad/fan setup as exhaust... Then, set the side fans as exhaust - that will help exhausting the hot air from the VGA too... and keep the front fans as intake...
Also, check the voltage issue, Arne mentioned above...
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10-31-2012 10:31 AM #13
What is your vcore under load when you are running Prime?
To help us help you - please provide as much information about your system and the problem as possible.
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10-31-2012 05:24 PM #14
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Ok VRM that's what I meant. I always get them confused. Intel keeps coming up with all these names. He is probably running Vcore too high if he followed JJ's vid for a 4.8ghz OC but the main cause is the VRM getting too hot which is causing the throttling. This is first hand knowledge with two P9X79 boards that did the same thing. I even tried replacing thermal pads on second one and it still needed the fan.