- Joined
- Apr 12, 2006
- Messages
- 29,653 (4.32/day)
System Name | EVA-01 |
---|---|
Processor | Intel i7 13700K |
Motherboard | Asus ROG Maximus Z690 HERO EVA Edition |
Cooling | ASUS ROG Ryujin III 360 with Noctua Industrial Fans |
Memory | PAtriot Viper Elite RGB 96GB @ 6000MHz. |
Video Card(s) | Asus ROG Strix GeForce RTX 3090 24GB OC EVA Edition |
Storage | Addlink S95 M.2 PCIe GEN 4x4 2TB |
Display(s) | Asus ROG SWIFT OLED PG42UQ |
Case | Thermaltake Core P3 TG |
Audio Device(s) | Realtek on board > Sony Receiver > Cerwin Vegas |
Power Supply | be quiet DARK POWER PRO 12 1500W |
Mouse | ROG STRIX Impact Electro Punk |
Keyboard | ROG STRIX Scope TKL Electro Punk |
Software | Windows 11 |
hey unclewebb, you should just link members to the information you contained in a PM you sent me ages ago. That sure changed my tune and take on the 45nm architecture in one sweet PM
Re: Thermal throttling
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I think most people don't realize how durable these chips are. 95C is not the thermal shut down point for these chips. That doesn't seem to happen until 125C! The words "holy sh!t" probably comes to mind.
125C is fully documented by Intel for the mobile chips but they don't list anything for the desktop processors so one user did his own testing and sent it to me. He got pretty damn close to that number but his computer would always shut down. Here's his maximum screen shot:
RealTemp was still going strong at a core temperature of 123C while CoreTemp and Everest were badly confused.
Another user has been testing his E8400 lately and found that even when it was so hot that it was thermal throttling, it still continued to run Prime stable even at 99C.
I think these CPUs can take a lot of thrashing without any long term problems. Even crazy overclockers are going to have to work hard to kill one of these chips. As long as you're running stable there is no need to even be concerned about core temperatures.
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That PM alone took everything I ever thought about Intel CPU's and threw it out the door. Mussels OCCT Linpack test often takes my proc to near 80* and I don't even flinch anymore. Thanks a ton for the insight to a whole new realm of overclocking.
Re: Thermal throttling
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
I think most people don't realize how durable these chips are. 95C is not the thermal shut down point for these chips. That doesn't seem to happen until 125C! The words "holy sh!t" probably comes to mind.
125C is fully documented by Intel for the mobile chips but they don't list anything for the desktop processors so one user did his own testing and sent it to me. He got pretty damn close to that number but his computer would always shut down. Here's his maximum screen shot:
RealTemp was still going strong at a core temperature of 123C while CoreTemp and Everest were badly confused.
Another user has been testing his E8400 lately and found that even when it was so hot that it was thermal throttling, it still continued to run Prime stable even at 99C.
I think these CPUs can take a lot of thrashing without any long term problems. Even crazy overclockers are going to have to work hard to kill one of these chips. As long as you're running stable there is no need to even be concerned about core temperatures.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
That PM alone took everything I ever thought about Intel CPU's and threw it out the door. Mussels OCCT Linpack test often takes my proc to near 80* and I don't even flinch anymore. Thanks a ton for the insight to a whole new realm of overclocking.
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