Monday, June 8th 2020
HWInfo's Power Reporting Deviation Sensor Reveals How Motherboard Makers are Cheating Ryzen CPUs
HWInfo with its latest version, introduced a new sensor that reveals whether your motherboard is tricking your 3rd Gen Ryzen processor into thinking its power consumption is within normal parameters, while in fact sending more power to it, to sustain boost clocks better, or support overclocking. These enhancements take advantage of the fact that an AMD Ryzen processor relies on the motherboard's CPU VRM controller for power-consumption telemetry, so the processor's power-management co-processor can accordingly adjust boost frequencies to stay within AMD's power-consumption limits.
Motherboard vendors have allegedly figured out a way to trick the processor into thinking its power consumption is within normal parameters (when it's not), and HWInfo's developer has determined a way to calculate the deviation between power consumption value reported to the CPU, against that measured by the VRM controller. This sensor is called "Power Reporting Deviation," and is an integer percentage value. 95-105% deviation can be interpreted as normal behavior, where the motherboard is respecting AMD specs. Anything outside this range could indicate a motherboard-level power enhancement designed to maximize performance of even processors that users prefer to run at stock speeds, reducing their lifespan. Overclocking legend "The Stilt" wrote a detailed essay on Power Reporting Deviation, which can be read here.
DOWNLOAD: HWInfo v6.27-4185 Beta
Motherboard vendors have allegedly figured out a way to trick the processor into thinking its power consumption is within normal parameters (when it's not), and HWInfo's developer has determined a way to calculate the deviation between power consumption value reported to the CPU, against that measured by the VRM controller. This sensor is called "Power Reporting Deviation," and is an integer percentage value. 95-105% deviation can be interpreted as normal behavior, where the motherboard is respecting AMD specs. Anything outside this range could indicate a motherboard-level power enhancement designed to maximize performance of even processors that users prefer to run at stock speeds, reducing their lifespan. Overclocking legend "The Stilt" wrote a detailed essay on Power Reporting Deviation, which can be read here.
DOWNLOAD: HWInfo v6.27-4185 Beta
32 Comments on HWInfo's Power Reporting Deviation Sensor Reveals How Motherboard Makers are Cheating Ryzen CPUs
Instead they have rather actively put pressure on the motherboard manufacturers, who have been caught using this exploit. "
www.hwinfo.com/forum/threads/explaining-the-amd-ryzen-power-reporting-deviation-metric-in-hwinfo.6456/
So TPU title even if click-baity is not false.
Nothing special I guess ?
Ultimately it's not the power that does the damage, it's the voltage. If a motherboard is increasing the volts from 1.32 volts to 1.38 volts, that's next to nothing, especially if the voltage peaks are within 0.01 volts.
"For AMD users, it's a nothingburger."
oh wait, that never happened.
My MSI B450M Mortal Max comes by default with both turbo and Precision boost enabled, PBO goes over spec power reporting derivation goes above the 100% while with turbo never gone above 100%, which makes sense!
I can't complain of MSI bringing boost enabled by default, but PBO is pretty much the AutoOC mode for Ryzen.
I end up disabling both since with the GTX 1650 Super, there is 0 bottleneck with my 3600X running without stock, and with the stock fan, the noise and temperatures are way much better.
Altough in the feature as soon as I get something better (cooling) I might end up enabling both again.
Cheers