When considering overclocking your CPU, it's important to focus on VCore or VID based on your specific needs.
When considering overclocking your CPU, it's important to focus on VCore or VID based on your specific needs.
It also relies on the specific loads being used. When AVX or similar advanced instructions are available, you may notice voltage fluctuations around 0.13 or higher. Without precise details about the "CPU," it's hard to give more targeted advice.
I suggest running load tests with RoG Real Bench and HWiNFO to understand the voltage range.
The situation also hinges on the specific loads being applied. With AVX or similar modern instructions, you might notice voltage fluctuations around 0.13 volts or higher. Since it's unclear exactly which CPU is involved, any further advice is hard to give. I suggest running load tests with RoG Real Bench and HWiNFO to understand the voltage range. I'm currently using a 4790k and am concerned about potentially damaging my CPU if I can't maintain the voltage needed while adjusting the BIOS settings.
It never aligns, it isn't anticipated to. What counts is the impact it delivers... I've configured mine in BIOS at 1.3875, and it consistently tops 1.44 during RoG Real stress tests. Sometimes it reaches 1.48 and briefly exceeds 1.50 for a moment.