F5F Stay Refreshed Power Users Overclocking I increased my 9900k to 5.0Ghz yet Cinebench R15 shows cores running at 3.6Ghz

I increased my 9900k to 5.0Ghz yet Cinebench R15 shows cores running at 3.6Ghz

I increased my 9900k to 5.0Ghz yet Cinebench R15 shows cores running at 3.6Ghz

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Gigi0202
Junior Member
18
07-10-2018, 05:32 PM
#11
Executing a program similar to AIDA64 can reveal the areas where your CPU is reducing performance...
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Gigi0202
07-10-2018, 05:32 PM #11

Executing a program similar to AIDA64 can reveal the areas where your CPU is reducing performance...

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RaiZer_
Member
203
07-12-2018, 10:48 AM
#12
I've seen reports that it draws around 200 watts at 5 ghz. But keep it running on turbo only TS until you manage to regulate temperatures with a more effective cooler, for example.
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RaiZer_
07-12-2018, 10:48 AM #12

I've seen reports that it draws around 200 watts at 5 ghz. But keep it running on turbo only TS until you manage to regulate temperatures with a more effective cooler, for example.

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Eusebio06
Senior Member
595
07-12-2018, 07:22 PM
#13
The discussion involves checking performance metrics and understanding cooling needs for overclocking. The speaker is seeking advice on temperature readings and the impact of throttling, while also comparing CPU testing environments.
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Eusebio06
07-12-2018, 07:22 PM #13

The discussion involves checking performance metrics and understanding cooling needs for overclocking. The speaker is seeking advice on temperature readings and the impact of throttling, while also comparing CPU testing environments.

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hunter20522
Junior Member
5
07-14-2018, 03:04 AM
#14
That's a valid observation, though it seems related to the additional voltage now applied by the CPU and factors such as LLC. I believe the main concern is simply verifying the stability of the overclock at the desired vcore before proceeding. If you can handle a 5GHz overclock in tests like Prime95 without exceeding around 95 degrees, then it's likely within safe limits. It's always wise to test overclocks first to establish your baseline performance.
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hunter20522
07-14-2018, 03:04 AM #14

That's a valid observation, though it seems related to the additional voltage now applied by the CPU and factors such as LLC. I believe the main concern is simply verifying the stability of the overclock at the desired vcore before proceeding. If you can handle a 5GHz overclock in tests like Prime95 without exceeding around 95 degrees, then it's likely within safe limits. It's always wise to test overclocks first to establish your baseline performance.

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GlazedMC
Junior Member
33
07-14-2018, 11:34 AM
#15
and according to what I understand, it only uses default turbos up to around 5,0 ghz... therefore the 4,7 you receive is actually the turbo...
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GlazedMC
07-14-2018, 11:34 AM #15

and according to what I understand, it only uses default turbos up to around 5,0 ghz... therefore the 4,7 you receive is actually the turbo...

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Unmigrate
Senior Member
644
07-15-2018, 09:13 AM
#16
BringerOfTea :
According to what I understand, it only uses default turbos up to around 5,0 ghz... therefore the 4,7 you receive is just the turbo... Yep, at default auto it should let one core reach 5GHz and the others hit 4.7GHz when MCE is active. I might be mistaken since I don't have the 9900K but an 8700K.
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Unmigrate
07-15-2018, 09:13 AM #16

BringerOfTea :
According to what I understand, it only uses default turbos up to around 5,0 ghz... therefore the 4,7 you receive is just the turbo... Yep, at default auto it should let one core reach 5GHz and the others hit 4.7GHz when MCE is active. I might be mistaken since I don't have the 9900K but an 8700K.

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