F5F Stay Refreshed Hardware Desktop The core clock remains unchanged.

The core clock remains unchanged.

The core clock remains unchanged.

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louiserty
Junior Member
30
05-15-2016, 01:54 AM
#1
I own an i5 3570k with a ga-z77-hd3 motherboard. I planned to boost performance by adjusting the core clock to 4 GHz, but it only reached 3.6 GHz. After checking in CPU ID and stressing the CPU, it remained stuck at 4 GHz. I then tried an easy tune, but the installation warned it wasn’t compatible with this product.
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louiserty
05-15-2016, 01:54 AM #1

I own an i5 3570k with a ga-z77-hd3 motherboard. I planned to boost performance by adjusting the core clock to 4 GHz, but it only reached 3.6 GHz. After checking in CPU ID and stressing the CPU, it remained stuck at 4 GHz. I then tried an easy tune, but the installation warned it wasn’t compatible with this product.

D
Dark_Chan
Member
77
05-27-2016, 09:27 AM
#2
When you try to adjust the main clock with a software tool like Intel XTU, it's likely you changed the single core turbo setting. In your experience with the 3570k, the behavior is consistent: - 4 cores turbo runs at 3.6GHz - 3 cores turbo at 3.7GHz - 2 cores turbo at 3.7GHz - 1 core turbo at 3.8GHz. To avoid this issue, you can turn off Intel Turbo Boost and set the core frequency multiplier in BIOS. The main downside is that your processor will always run at that speed, which raises heat and power usage.
D
Dark_Chan
05-27-2016, 09:27 AM #2

When you try to adjust the main clock with a software tool like Intel XTU, it's likely you changed the single core turbo setting. In your experience with the 3570k, the behavior is consistent: - 4 cores turbo runs at 3.6GHz - 3 cores turbo at 3.7GHz - 2 cores turbo at 3.7GHz - 1 core turbo at 3.8GHz. To avoid this issue, you can turn off Intel Turbo Boost and set the core frequency multiplier in BIOS. The main downside is that your processor will always run at that speed, which raises heat and power usage.

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Adabelle
Senior Member
724
05-28-2016, 01:08 AM
#3
I've tested both options, but it remains at 3.6.
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Adabelle
05-28-2016, 01:08 AM #3

I've tested both options, but it remains at 3.6.

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DiegoLeCreep
Member
88
06-04-2016, 06:47 PM
#4
Remove CMOS settings, test version 1.3 (offset) and version 3.9.
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DiegoLeCreep
06-04-2016, 06:47 PM #4

Remove CMOS settings, test version 1.3 (offset) and version 3.9.

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Adabelle
Senior Member
724
06-15-2016, 05:35 PM
#5
Task Manager typically provides an estimate rather than a precise measurement. It offers a value close to the real one, within an acceptable margin. If the setting appears in your BIOS, turn off Intel Speedstep and check if it improves performance. Otherwise, adjust the turbo ratios of the 1, 2, 3, and 4 cores to 4GHz.
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Adabelle
06-15-2016, 05:35 PM #5

Task Manager typically provides an estimate rather than a precise measurement. It offers a value close to the real one, within an acceptable margin. If the setting appears in your BIOS, turn off Intel Speedstep and check if it improves performance. Otherwise, adjust the turbo ratios of the 1, 2, 3, and 4 cores to 4GHz.