F5F Stay Refreshed Power Users Overclocking i7-9700KF Core Vid min/max/average

i7-9700KF Core Vid min/max/average

i7-9700KF Core Vid min/max/average

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tooturntbby
Junior Member
46
12-28-2016, 12:16 PM
#11
Hello everyone,
could you please review my outcomes following the overclock? The settings were at 5Ghz.
CPU clock ratio: 50
CPU base clock: Auto
CPU Vcore (bios -1.34V)
Uncore Ratio: Auto
LLC-High
XMP target: 3200Mhz
The results are from after 2 hours of gaming.
https://ibb.co/Lx832N0
T
tooturntbby
12-28-2016, 12:16 PM #11

Hello everyone,
could you please review my outcomes following the overclock? The settings were at 5Ghz.
CPU clock ratio: 50
CPU base clock: Auto
CPU Vcore (bios -1.34V)
Uncore Ratio: Auto
LLC-High
XMP target: 3200Mhz
The results are from after 2 hours of gaming.
https://ibb.co/Lx832N0

H
Hidekih
Posting Freak
849
01-04-2017, 09:36 AM
#12
My sense is that you are too high.
I see 1.48 max vid.
I also see clocks consistent near 5.0.
If you implement adaptive voltage and speedstep, your multiplier and vcore will drop when there is little to do.
That, I think, would be a good thing.
I do not see any temperature history.
H
Hidekih
01-04-2017, 09:36 AM #12

My sense is that you are too high.
I see 1.48 max vid.
I also see clocks consistent near 5.0.
If you implement adaptive voltage and speedstep, your multiplier and vcore will drop when there is little to do.
That, I think, would be a good thing.
I do not see any temperature history.

X
xAuDesignsx
Member
214
01-06-2017, 10:46 AM
#13
I don't understand what I should do...:-D Where is the adaptive voltage and speedstep? Why do I need lower CPU voltage in max settings? This is just the processor's requirement, but I set 1.30V and Vcore on the motherboard, which is shown in HWInfo: Min:1.272V/Max:1.380/Average:1.348V. VID is connected to clock speed. It's what the CPU expects at a certain speed, unrelated to actual voltage unless your BIOS has everything set to auto. Here are some temperatures: https://ibb.co/s5jcnHs
X
xAuDesignsx
01-06-2017, 10:46 AM #13

I don't understand what I should do...:-D Where is the adaptive voltage and speedstep? Why do I need lower CPU voltage in max settings? This is just the processor's requirement, but I set 1.30V and Vcore on the motherboard, which is shown in HWInfo: Min:1.272V/Max:1.380/Average:1.348V. VID is connected to clock speed. It's what the CPU expects at a certain speed, unrelated to actual voltage unless your BIOS has everything set to auto. Here are some temperatures: https://ibb.co/s5jcnHs

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Eyden75
Junior Member
9
01-06-2017, 12:23 PM
#14
Motherboard manufacturers use various names for these settings. It's best to visit a Gigabyte overclocking forum for detailed information. In the meantime, reduce your target by a few levels.
My method is straightforward:
Restore everything to auto mode.
Then slowly raise the all-core multiplier and monitor progress.
Once you hit your threshold, decrease at least one multiplier.
Your final setting should stay around 1.35 vcore as recorded by cpu-Z, and not exceed 85°C during a stress test using HWmonitor.
You might not reach the chip's full potential, but it will still be safe and satisfactory.
Not every chip supports 5.0; you could end up with something less impressive.
E
Eyden75
01-06-2017, 12:23 PM #14

Motherboard manufacturers use various names for these settings. It's best to visit a Gigabyte overclocking forum for detailed information. In the meantime, reduce your target by a few levels.
My method is straightforward:
Restore everything to auto mode.
Then slowly raise the all-core multiplier and monitor progress.
Once you hit your threshold, decrease at least one multiplier.
Your final setting should stay around 1.35 vcore as recorded by cpu-Z, and not exceed 85°C during a stress test using HWmonitor.
You might not reach the chip's full potential, but it will still be safe and satisfactory.
Not every chip supports 5.0; you could end up with something less impressive.

E
Eppikx
Senior Member
447
01-06-2017, 02:43 PM
#15
1.272V/Max:1.380/Average:1.348V.
The voltage mentioned here relates to clock speed settings, not actual power levels unless your BIOS is set for auto power management.
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Eppikx
01-06-2017, 02:43 PM #15

1.272V/Max:1.380/Average:1.348V.
The voltage mentioned here relates to clock speed settings, not actual power levels unless your BIOS is set for auto power management.

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