s around stability and temperature at 14900K highlight significant challenges.
s around stability and temperature at 14900K highlight significant challenges.
I'm facing a tricky situation here. The 14900K is really tough to manage. It comes with a lot of specs: 360 AIO, ThermalGrizzly Kryonaught Extreme Asus Maximus Hero Z790, 192 GB Corsair Vengeance DDR5 at 5000MHz, NVIDIA 3090FE. I turned off ASUS multicore enhancement and adjusted the long and short duration limits to 250. I also lowered Preformance and Efficient core ratios a bit and did some undervolting to -0.035v, but it still throttles during Cinebench if it runs at all. Plus, after switching from the 13900K, my Call of Duty keeps crashing in the loading screen, and I don’t get why. Any suggestions for motherboard tweaks? Also, I’m seeing Chrome and edge errors on YouTube and other sites with no extensions, after a fresh Chrome install (STATUS_ACCESS_VIOLATION). BugReport.txt – edited May 11, 2024 by Andrew_s
The latest version is installed. Testing with standard and adjusted configurations hasn't resolved the issue.
I faced the same problems with that game too. Turn on “Intel Baseline Defaults profile” in your BIOS. This has been widely covered in the media, linked to I9 13th and 14th generation CPUs overclocked by motherboard makers aiming to enhance their reviews. It should resolve the game issues and overall stability problems. It worked for me.
I truly hoped it would function, since it was the only attempt I made, but unfortunately the game keeps crashing.
It's important to understand that ASUS's "Intel Baseline Profile" isn't a true baseline configuration. It represents whatever adjustments they made, and some Intel settings they suggest you turn on aren't included by default. On my system, crashes usually stem from the AC loadline setting being too low—something many motherboards include out of the box, even in the baseline profile. Increasing it from the default around 50 to roughly 70-80 should resolve the problem, even with unlocked power limits. If this doesn't help, consider enabling CEP. This option makes crashes much harder but may slightly affect performance. The setting appears recommended in Intel's docs but isn't part of the "Intel Baseline Profile."