F5F Stay Refreshed Power Users Overclocking Turbo boost not visible in system diagnostics

Turbo boost not visible in system diagnostics

Turbo boost not visible in system diagnostics

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Doorox30
Member
50
05-06-2018, 06:36 PM
#1
Hi, i have a i3 9100f with a ASUS TUF B36M-PLUS motherboard. I know its not possible to overclock but i know There is a turbo boost function that can give the cpu a little more performance. The problem is that i cant find where to enable it in bios.
Thank for answers👍
D
Doorox30
05-06-2018, 06:36 PM #1

Hi, i have a i3 9100f with a ASUS TUF B36M-PLUS motherboard. I know its not possible to overclock but i know There is a turbo boost function that can give the cpu a little more performance. The problem is that i cant find where to enable it in bios.
Thank for answers👍

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Arazon
Member
177
05-06-2018, 06:55 PM
#2
I used various tools to evaluate its performance. Most benchmarks today assess all cores together rather than focusing on individual ones, which is why you should test single-core capabilities. This particular CPU has a maximum of 3.6 across all cores, while 4.2 indicates the peak a single core can achieve, so a proper test is necessary to confirm this.
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Arazon
05-06-2018, 06:55 PM #2

I used various tools to evaluate its performance. Most benchmarks today assess all cores together rather than focusing on individual ones, which is why you should test single-core capabilities. This particular CPU has a maximum of 3.6 across all cores, while 4.2 indicates the peak a single core can achieve, so a proper test is necessary to confirm this.

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thorpops12
Member
244
05-08-2018, 04:25 PM
#3
It's automatic and set to be active by default.
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thorpops12
05-08-2018, 04:25 PM #3

It's automatic and set to be active by default.

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XenkerPT
Member
158
05-08-2018, 05:02 PM
#4
Because it doesn't exceed 3,6 and mentions a maximum of 4,2
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XenkerPT
05-08-2018, 05:02 PM #4

Because it doesn't exceed 3,6 and mentions a maximum of 4,2

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136
05-16-2018, 04:53 PM
#5
I used various tools to evaluate its performance. Most benchmarks today assess all cores together, which doesn’t reflect the need to test individual core capabilities. This CPU has a maximum of 3.6 across all cores, while 4.2 indicates the peak a single core can achieve, so a proper test is essential. You can check utilization by downloading HWmonitor and observing the results. For CPU-Z, you’ll need to install it from the provided link. After running both programs, navigate to the Bench tab in CPU-Z and execute the multi-threaded and single-threaded benchmarks. The results should display on HWmonitor showing one core outperforming the others.
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TheLittleChief
05-16-2018, 04:53 PM #5

I used various tools to evaluate its performance. Most benchmarks today assess all cores together, which doesn’t reflect the need to test individual core capabilities. This CPU has a maximum of 3.6 across all cores, while 4.2 indicates the peak a single core can achieve, so a proper test is essential. You can check utilization by downloading HWmonitor and observing the results. For CPU-Z, you’ll need to install it from the provided link. After running both programs, navigate to the Bench tab in CPU-Z and execute the multi-threaded and single-threaded benchmarks. The results should display on HWmonitor showing one core outperforming the others.