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overclocking cpus and voltage regulation

overclocking cpus and voltage regulation

T
TheOPdestroyer
Junior Member
11
02-01-2021, 07:40 PM
#1
Overclocking CPUs varies due to CPU binning affecting required OC voltage, which in turn influences heat generation and temperature. High-end motherboards often include 8-14 voltage regulator designs to support premium CPU overclocking needs.
T
TheOPdestroyer
02-01-2021, 07:40 PM #1

Overclocking CPUs varies due to CPU binning affecting required OC voltage, which in turn influences heat generation and temperature. High-end motherboards often include 8-14 voltage regulator designs to support premium CPU overclocking needs.

N
Natanas8
Junior Member
16
02-03-2021, 08:11 AM
#2
Semiconductor production isn't perfectly consistent. Small inconsistencies or differences between chips can influence how transistors switch. Chips with more precise binning have faster-switching transistors, while those with less precise binning might need stronger voltage to achieve similar performance. Stronger voltage raises temperature. Defects in lower binned chips can also cause more leakage current, increasing power usage.
N
Natanas8
02-03-2021, 08:11 AM #2

Semiconductor production isn't perfectly consistent. Small inconsistencies or differences between chips can influence how transistors switch. Chips with more precise binning have faster-switching transistors, while those with less precise binning might need stronger voltage to achieve similar performance. Stronger voltage raises temperature. Defects in lower binned chips can also cause more leakage current, increasing power usage.

M
M4k31m
Junior Member
7
02-05-2021, 03:38 AM
#3
Semiconductor production isn't perfectly consistent. Small inconsistencies or differences between chips can influence how transistors switch. A chip with a very high binning rating will have faster-switching transistors. A chip with a lower binning might need more voltage to force the transistor to switch at the same speed as the higher-rated one. Using more voltage raises the operating temperature. Defects in a lower binned chip can also cause increased leakage current, which raises power consumption.

Increasing the number of VRM phases offers several benefits:
- For a fixed current, more phases distribute the load, reducing current and heat per phase
- The effective switching frequency of the VRM rises proportionally to the phase count, without the extra losses from very high frequencies
- Faster switching lowers voltage ripple, cuts current through capacitors, and extends their lifespan, while also enhancing transient response.
M
M4k31m
02-05-2021, 03:38 AM #3

Semiconductor production isn't perfectly consistent. Small inconsistencies or differences between chips can influence how transistors switch. A chip with a very high binning rating will have faster-switching transistors. A chip with a lower binning might need more voltage to force the transistor to switch at the same speed as the higher-rated one. Using more voltage raises the operating temperature. Defects in a lower binned chip can also cause increased leakage current, which raises power consumption.

Increasing the number of VRM phases offers several benefits:
- For a fixed current, more phases distribute the load, reducing current and heat per phase
- The effective switching frequency of the VRM rises proportionally to the phase count, without the extra losses from very high frequencies
- Faster switching lowers voltage ripple, cuts current through capacitors, and extends their lifespan, while also enhancing transient response.