F5F Stay Refreshed Hardware Desktop regarding my motherboard's voltage requirements

regarding my motherboard's voltage requirements

regarding my motherboard's voltage requirements

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65
09-05-2016, 07:33 AM
#1
Regarding my motherboard's SOC voltage: when RAM speed is 4800 MHz, it reads 1.04V, but at 6000 MHz or with Expo enabled it jumps to 1.28V (maximum). Using Hwinfo to check these details seems appropriate. Should I adjust any settings? What is the expected SOC voltage at 6000 MHz?
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NinjaPanther17
09-05-2016, 07:33 AM #1

Regarding my motherboard's SOC voltage: when RAM speed is 4800 MHz, it reads 1.04V, but at 6000 MHz or with Expo enabled it jumps to 1.28V (maximum). Using Hwinfo to check these details seems appropriate. Should I adjust any settings? What is the expected SOC voltage at 6000 MHz?

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Cubiz_FPS
Junior Member
42
09-05-2016, 08:30 AM
#2
It's not a concern I'd stress over. My reading is 1.24 at 6000Mhz CL30. A slight shift to 1.35 might affect it, but at 1.28 it's fine—just keep it as is.
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Cubiz_FPS
09-05-2016, 08:30 AM #2

It's not a concern I'd stress over. My reading is 1.24 at 6000Mhz CL30. A slight shift to 1.35 might affect it, but at 1.28 it's fine—just keep it as is.

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Skater420
Member
155
09-16-2016, 06:59 AM
#3
It is automatically adjusted by the board according to other configurations. With Zen 4 on DDR5 6000 you can achieve voltages below 1.2V, sometimes even 1.1V. Lowering Vsoc has only a minor impact on temperatures but enables cores to run slightly faster while staying within power limits. It may also help prolong the chip's lifespan. Your decision to change it depends on your preferences. If you decide to do so, choose a stable voltage for your device.
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Skater420
09-16-2016, 06:59 AM #3

It is automatically adjusted by the board according to other configurations. With Zen 4 on DDR5 6000 you can achieve voltages below 1.2V, sometimes even 1.1V. Lowering Vsoc has only a minor impact on temperatures but enables cores to run slightly faster while staying within power limits. It may also help prolong the chip's lifespan. Your decision to change it depends on your preferences. If you decide to do so, choose a stable voltage for your device.

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Rita11
Junior Member
33
09-16-2016, 08:43 AM
#4
Let go of the numbers and focus on what matters. Your voltage looks fine, nothing’s harming anything. Everyone should just stop obsessing over every small detail.
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Rita11
09-16-2016, 08:43 AM #4

Let go of the numbers and focus on what matters. Your voltage looks fine, nothing’s harming anything. Everyone should just stop obsessing over every small detail.

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ragde875
Junior Member
17
09-16-2016, 09:16 AM
#5
Let go of the numbers and focus on what matters. Your voltage looks fine, nothing’s harming anything. Everyone should just stop obsessing over every small detail.
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ragde875
09-16-2016, 09:16 AM #5

Let go of the numbers and focus on what matters. Your voltage looks fine, nothing’s harming anything. Everyone should just stop obsessing over every small detail.