F5F Stay Refreshed Hardware Desktop System performance declining unexpectedly without clear cause.

System performance declining unexpectedly without clear cause.

System performance declining unexpectedly without clear cause.

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rayku98
Member
173
07-07-2025, 06:46 PM
#1
Hey, I see your issue clearly. Your PC runs smoothly but suddenly drops to just 1GHz without warning. You always need to restart it back to around 3.6GHz. Despite cleaning the thermal paste and changing the thermal paste again, the problem persists. The motherboard is an ASUS A68HM, and the PSU is a 650W 80+ Bronze unit. Your RAM is 8GB Corsair Vengeance 1600MHz, and you have a 120GB SSD. Everything seems fine on the surface—what could be causing this strange behavior?
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rayku98
07-07-2025, 06:46 PM #1

Hey, I see your issue clearly. Your PC runs smoothly but suddenly drops to just 1GHz without warning. You always need to restart it back to around 3.6GHz. Despite cleaning the thermal paste and changing the thermal paste again, the problem persists. The motherboard is an ASUS A68HM, and the PSU is a 650W 80+ Bronze unit. Your RAM is 8GB Corsair Vengeance 1600MHz, and you have a 120GB SSD. Everything seems fine on the surface—what could be causing this strange behavior?

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ilija
Member
206
07-07-2025, 07:56 PM
#2
my graphics card is an ASUS ROG Strix RX 470 with 4GB RAM
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ilija
07-07-2025, 07:56 PM #2

my graphics card is an ASUS ROG Strix RX 470 with 4GB RAM

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_SIRENDER_
Member
146
07-07-2025, 09:14 PM
#3
These bios entries describe system parameters that control how your CPU handles heat and performance. The numbers like "CPU temperature" and "CPU frequency" show the operating conditions inside the processor. The settings you see are meant to balance speed and cooling—higher temperatures mean more power, which can affect stability. To reduce CPU speed and keep temperatures lower, you can disable certain features in the BIOS or system settings. This will prevent the CPU from reaching high temps during intense tasks like gaming, helping maintain a cooler environment without sacrificing too much performance.
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_SIRENDER_
07-07-2025, 09:14 PM #3

These bios entries describe system parameters that control how your CPU handles heat and performance. The numbers like "CPU temperature" and "CPU frequency" show the operating conditions inside the processor. The settings you see are meant to balance speed and cooling—higher temperatures mean more power, which can affect stability. To reduce CPU speed and keep temperatures lower, you can disable certain features in the BIOS or system settings. This will prevent the CPU from reaching high temps during intense tasks like gaming, helping maintain a cooler environment without sacrificing too much performance.

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Greenybomb
Member
158
07-07-2025, 10:25 PM
#4
CPUs are supposed to clock down when under a lower load to save power; that's normal behavior. Or are you saying that the CPU is running at 1.39GHz even if placed under load? - Like when playing a game or running a CPU benchmark
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Greenybomb
07-07-2025, 10:25 PM #4

CPUs are supposed to clock down when under a lower load to save power; that's normal behavior. Or are you saying that the CPU is running at 1.39GHz even if placed under load? - Like when playing a game or running a CPU benchmark

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ObsPlayz
Junior Member
8
07-24-2025, 08:02 PM
#5
Occasionally during gameplay it slows down, but usually when I'm just browsing YouTube the CPU drops:/, which is frustrating.
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ObsPlayz
07-24-2025, 08:02 PM #5

Occasionally during gameplay it slows down, but usually when I'm just browsing YouTube the CPU drops:/, which is frustrating.

D
desi443
Junior Member
16
07-24-2025, 09:32 PM
#6
With your own graphics card, YouTube won’t heavily tax the CPU—most decoding happens on the GPU. You haven’t experienced any performance problems.
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desi443
07-24-2025, 09:32 PM #6

With your own graphics card, YouTube won’t heavily tax the CPU—most decoding happens on the GPU. You haven’t experienced any performance problems.

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Cupcake_Rose
Posting Freak
844
07-25-2025, 12:34 AM
#7
I notice some issues like stutters and FPS drops.
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Cupcake_Rose
07-25-2025, 12:34 AM #7

I notice some issues like stutters and FPS drops.

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superdial
Junior Member
15
07-25-2025, 01:51 AM
#8
It might be due to the outdated Athlon X4 processor. Running a stress test with tools like Cinebench or 7-Zip could confirm if the CPU performs as expected.
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superdial
07-25-2025, 01:51 AM #8

It might be due to the outdated Athlon X4 processor. Running a stress test with tools like Cinebench or 7-Zip could confirm if the CPU performs as expected.

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192
08-04-2025, 09:51 AM
#9
I performed a stress test and the CPU speed remained stable, though it continues to fluctuate between 3.6, 3.8, and 3.5.
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Flower_Mermaid
08-04-2025, 09:51 AM #9

I performed a stress test and the CPU speed remained stable, though it continues to fluctuate between 3.6, 3.8, and 3.5.

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Roots18
Junior Member
6
08-04-2025, 03:40 PM
#10
CPUs have never stayed at one clock speed consistently since the Pentium 4 era. With a base speed of 3.1GHz and a boost of 3.8GHz, fluctuations between those numbers during heavy tasks are typical. In short, your CPU is functioning properly. The stuttering you're seeing in games likely stems from its inability to keep up with modern demands, especially given its age and the requirements of 2023 titles.
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Roots18
08-04-2025, 03:40 PM #10

CPUs have never stayed at one clock speed consistently since the Pentium 4 era. With a base speed of 3.1GHz and a boost of 3.8GHz, fluctuations between those numbers during heavy tasks are typical. In short, your CPU is functioning properly. The stuttering you're seeing in games likely stems from its inability to keep up with modern demands, especially given its age and the requirements of 2023 titles.

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