F5F Stay Refreshed Software PC Gaming Performance drops significantly compared to previous speeds.

Performance drops significantly compared to previous speeds.

Performance drops significantly compared to previous speeds.

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Lorddoom139
Posting Freak
956
06-02-2020, 10:48 AM
#1
Hello, I just purchased an RTX 3070 Aores. I’m expecting the FPS I was promised, but it seems to be lower than expected. I had a RX 5700 XT Sapphire Nitro Pulse and it was running better. Another issue is that the CPU MHz display only shows 4025, whereas during setup it consistently stayed around 4.2 GHz. Sometimes it drops below 4000 MHz, not just in COD but across other games too. It rarely hits the full 4205 MHz, and I’m confused about why. Also, my GPU usage never exceeds 80%, except for Resident Evil 3. Can anyone help me get the CPU back to 4.2 GHz? Thank you. It’s an R5 3600.
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Lorddoom139
06-02-2020, 10:48 AM #1

Hello, I just purchased an RTX 3070 Aores. I’m expecting the FPS I was promised, but it seems to be lower than expected. I had a RX 5700 XT Sapphire Nitro Pulse and it was running better. Another issue is that the CPU MHz display only shows 4025, whereas during setup it consistently stayed around 4.2 GHz. Sometimes it drops below 4000 MHz, not just in COD but across other games too. It rarely hits the full 4205 MHz, and I’m confused about why. Also, my GPU usage never exceeds 80%, except for Resident Evil 3. Can anyone help me get the CPU back to 4.2 GHz? Thank you. It’s an R5 3600.

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Koreje
Junior Member
44
06-09-2020, 09:21 PM
#2
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Koreje
06-09-2020, 09:21 PM #2

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mjt2789
Senior Member
483
06-10-2020, 05:03 AM
#3
CPU single thread bound refers to the maximum number of threads a processor can handle simultaneously. It’s often mentioned in videos to explain performance limits.
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mjt2789
06-10-2020, 05:03 AM #3

CPU single thread bound refers to the maximum number of threads a processor can handle simultaneously. It’s often mentioned in videos to explain performance limits.

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ItsJamesYT
Member
69
06-11-2020, 08:26 PM
#4
CPU single thread limit indicates a very high utilization on one of your CPU threads—often in the 80s or 90s. Since games tend to use just one core, this usually sets the cap. Though your overall usage might sit around 50%, a thread running at extremely high levels could be the main issue. The video suggests NVIDIA’s driver helps mitigate this by allowing more CPU load compared to AMD’s driver.
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ItsJamesYT
06-11-2020, 08:26 PM #4

CPU single thread limit indicates a very high utilization on one of your CPU threads—often in the 80s or 90s. Since games tend to use just one core, this usually sets the cap. Though your overall usage might sit around 50%, a thread running at extremely high levels could be the main issue. The video suggests NVIDIA’s driver helps mitigate this by allowing more CPU load compared to AMD’s driver.

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BuloloKO
Member
69
06-12-2020, 01:07 AM
#5
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BuloloKO
06-12-2020, 01:07 AM #5

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DinVin
Member
64
06-12-2020, 08:43 AM
#6
it previously reached 4.2 ghz with the RX 5700 XT too. after reinstalling Windows, it stopped and lost around 200 MHz, but I haven't managed to resolve the issue yet.
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DinVin
06-12-2020, 08:43 AM #6

it previously reached 4.2 ghz with the RX 5700 XT too. after reinstalling Windows, it stopped and lost around 200 MHz, but I haven't managed to resolve the issue yet.

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murderman25
Member
168
06-19-2020, 06:57 AM
#7
I haven't heard anything about it, but I'd be surprised if they didn't make changes. It might depend on how many cores were used, since AMD's CPU boost algorithm is quite complex.
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murderman25
06-19-2020, 06:57 AM #7

I haven't heard anything about it, but I'd be surprised if they didn't make changes. It might depend on how many cores were used, since AMD's CPU boost algorithm is quite complex.

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Erykane67
Member
122
06-21-2020, 07:52 AM
#8
Consider getting an AMD card if you're looking to upgrade from your RX 6800 to a compatible XT version for your RTX 3070.
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Erykane67
06-21-2020, 07:52 AM #8

Consider getting an AMD card if you're looking to upgrade from your RX 6800 to a compatible XT version for your RTX 3070.

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SynneK
Member
185
06-21-2020, 09:02 AM
#9
do you require advanced RTX capabilities such as NVENC, ray tracing, broadcast rendering and similar features? the 3070 remains a powerful GPU with many features and more refined rasterization compared to the 6800, though that's about it (besides reduced driver overhead too). if you're not concerned about other aspects, look at eBay listings to gauge the card's current market value. sometimes you can sell it and purchase a cheaper non-XT 6800 model to save money, unless it's crucial for your gameplay.
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SynneK
06-21-2020, 09:02 AM #9

do you require advanced RTX capabilities such as NVENC, ray tracing, broadcast rendering and similar features? the 3070 remains a powerful GPU with many features and more refined rasterization compared to the 6800, though that's about it (besides reduced driver overhead too). if you're not concerned about other aspects, look at eBay listings to gauge the card's current market value. sometimes you can sell it and purchase a cheaper non-XT 6800 model to save money, unless it's crucial for your gameplay.

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Baby_Nae
Member
63
06-23-2020, 08:16 AM
#10
I get what you mean about the higher clock speed, but Ryzen processors don’t behave that way. They usually reach 4.0 under stress, not consistently. At light loads like 4.2, they’re only active on a few cores, not all at once. For most tasks, this CPU handles well—often between 10 and 25% usage during gaming, which is why it can exceed 4.0 without issues. In more demanding games, it might hit around 50%, but still stays light. For heavy workloads, it boosts above 4.0 because those tasks are more intensive. A good approach is to test your hardware with various programs to see how it performs before assuming anything needs fixing.
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Baby_Nae
06-23-2020, 08:16 AM #10

I get what you mean about the higher clock speed, but Ryzen processors don’t behave that way. They usually reach 4.0 under stress, not consistently. At light loads like 4.2, they’re only active on a few cores, not all at once. For most tasks, this CPU handles well—often between 10 and 25% usage during gaming, which is why it can exceed 4.0 without issues. In more demanding games, it might hit around 50%, but still stays light. For heavy workloads, it boosts above 4.0 because those tasks are more intensive. A good approach is to test your hardware with various programs to see how it performs before assuming anything needs fixing.