Problem reaching the boost specifications on the CPU.
Problem reaching the boost specifications on the CPU.
You're facing challenges with the CPU not reaching its boost frequency despite Intel's claims. The TDP was increased in XTU, and power delivery appears sufficient. The temperature stays low at sustained speeds. Since the system is mainly for rendering, any marginal gain would be valuable. Consider checking BIOS settings or thermal management options.
3.8Ghz represents the peak single-core speed. The boost frequency across all cores ought to be slightly reduced. 3.3 seems accurate in reality.
But variations among cores might appear minimal in multi-threaded tests like XTU and Cinebench, since each consistently reaches 3.3 GHz without noticeable differences.
The operating system determines how many cores are used for intensive work versus distributing tasks among others. You don’t have to manually set this in the BIOS; it’s managed automatically. This affects performance and efficiency. Your concern about rendering speed is valid—better optimization helps! Haha.
Single core enhancement doesn't mean you can increase performance by activating just a few cores, especially when most remain idle. It's more accurate to say one core can deliver maximum boost only if the rest are nearly off. This scenario is uncommon.
From my observations, the benchmarks are built to engage every core simultaneously at peak performance, which explains the uniform speed across all processors. The minor variations you notice typically occur only during regular use or at least that’s when I’ve observed them most often.
The Xeon E5-2690 operates at 3.80 GHz with one core engaged and drops to 3.30 GHz when six or more cores are running. It functions precisely according to Intel's design.