How Do I Set Adaptive Voltage
How Do I Set Adaptive Voltage
The voltage drops to its minimum at idle, which is unexpected since it doesn't go any lower. For instance, the i7-4770k at idle (800MHz) reaches a voltage of about 0.718 volts.
I adjusted it to adaptive with an offset of -0.06 V, resulting in a maximum of 2.3 V (instead of the previous 2.9 V). Now even during the Intel XTU stress test it stays below 1.23 V!! Thanks a lot for all the assistance Skyler
I adjusted it to be adaptive with an offset of -0.06 V, which raised the maximum to 2.3 V instead of the previous 2.9 V. Even under the Intel XTU stress test, it stays below 1.23 V!! Thanks a lot for all the assistance, Skyler.
I only modified the CPU multiplier, enabled XMP for my DRAM, and set the CPU voltage to adaptive with the known value for my overclock.
Are there any other changes besides those?
SkylerJacobs updated the settings to adaptive with an offset of -0.06 V, achieving a maximum of 2.3 V instead of 2.9 V previously. The voltage stayed below 1.23 V even during the Intel XTU stress test. Thanks for all the assistance, Skyler! Glad to hear the changes helped. In my setup, I adjusted the CPU multiplier, enabled XMP for DRAM, and set the CPU voltage to adaptive. I also changed the cache ratio to 43 after stress testing. It seems you didn’t discover the correct voltage on your own—just looked it up online, which isn’t advised.
SkylerJacobs also performed manual voltage testing and then adjusted adaptive settings for power efficiency during idle or low loads. I wanted to check if any other changes were made, since I enjoy learning from others' experiences. Ok, well the only additional step was adjusting the cache ratio once everything was configured. This is similar to overclocking the CPU ratio—using small increments and stress testing each time. The key difference is you don’t change the voltage; instead, you push the existing voltages to their maximum possible value. I achieved a cache speed of 4.3 GHz while my CPU ran at 4.6 GHz.