Is this reading data from CPUID HWMonitor (latest) accurate?
Is this reading data from CPUID HWMonitor (latest) accurate?
Just completed the overclocking of my i7 4790k to 4.5Ghz 1.24v and lost the lottery chip. During a stress test with ASUS Realbench v2.54 for five hours, along with Aida 64 using FPU, CPU, Cache, and System Memory checks lasting one to two hours, both systems maintained temperatures below 85°C. The setup includes a Noctua NH D15 S fan and a 120mm push-pull fan. The maximum temperature remained under 85°C throughout the tests.
Here’s the list of components and configurations:
i7 4790k @ 4.5Ghz 1.24v
Noctua NH D15 S: 1x 140mm fan, 1x 120mm fan in push-pull mode
ASUS Z97 Maximus Vii Hero
ASUS Strix GTX 970
Corsair Vengeance Red 32GB DDR3 1600mhz
EVGA G2 850 W
In the BIOS, I adjusted:
Sync All core
45x
Core Voltage: Adaptive Voltage
Offset Value: -
Offset: -0.060
Additional Voltage for Turbo Boost: 1.300
Resulting max load under 85°C during full load conditions.
EPU is enabled, C-states are active up to Package Support C state 7S.
Yeah its fine, i personally dont really care what temperature is during stress test unless its over 90C. Its more important what temperature is during gaming and everyday use, keep it under 80C.
Try to find stable overclock with MANUAL(static) voltage first, only then try adaptive. AIDA64 will not stress your CPU good enough and u will most likely to BSOD during gaming. Try Intel burn test, it works best for me.
Yeah its fine, i personally dont really care what temperature is during stress test unless its over 90C. Its more important what temperature is during gaming and everyday use, keep it under 80C.
Try to find stable overclock with MANUAL(static) voltage first, only then try adaptive. AIDA64 will not stress your CPU good enough and u will most likely to BSOD during gaming. Try Intel burn test, it works best for me.