FCLK won't go 1:1 for some magic reason
FCLK won't go 1:1 for some magic reason
I believe there was an issue, since from a web development perspective I can confirm I clicked on the picture to inspect it more closely—it remained very blurry. It seemed like a 300x150px image that had been upscaled. Now it looks clear, though I’m unsure if the backend failed to optimize it for size or if you uploaded a low-resolution file. Either way, the clock frequency is currently 2200mhz.
Running the IF at 2200 is impressive. I used a standard test case to verify its performance.
The "Uncore Frequency" displayed in your first image represents the FCLK frequency. Because Uncore and DRAM share the same frequency, it equals a 1:1 ratio. The FSB ratio pertains to the motherboard's BCLK, usually configured at 100MHz.
I ran Cinebench, Games and 3dMark tests. Mostly focused on gaming.
This 1:16 ratio is the memory divider connected to the reference clock or bus clock. To reach 1600MHz, the CPU/memory cable needs a 1:16 configuration. If you raise the reference clock to 100MHz, the memory clock drops to 16MHz per 1MHz FSB with a 1:16 divider. That’s the info you should know about what CPU-Z is indicating. The rest is covered by others.