i would also like to point out that at no time did i suggest that raising the vcore would not increase temps i simply said earthdog was wrong when he said a speed increase without a voltage increase would not increase temps.. quite clearly it does..
I never stated, inferred, nor alluded to you thinking that. Also, I never said a speed increase without a voltage increase would not increase temps.
Here is what I said...
you may be surprised at how little temperatures increase with just clockspeed increases and no voltage bumps...
For a couple hundred Mhz with the same voltage, I consistently saw around 1-2C.
I also believe your severe overvoltage for the clockspeed (4Ghz) is playing a part in that. All my testing was at stock voltage and raising the clocks on stock voltage... or a voltage that started out appropriate for the clockspeed. 1.28v is a lot for stock. You would not be able to raise clockspeeds 600 Mhz on most CPUs without changing the voltage so this is probably not the best test.
EDIT: Your testing method also leaves a lot to be desired.. First, the length of the test is way too short.. its also different lengths of time. by over 50%. The cooler one was run for 54s, while the hotter one ran for 1:23s. My suggestion is to run Intel XTU stress test. It has a time on it that will stop it automatically (5 mins is default). Run that with Realtemp and you may have something worthwhile.... but after that, you should try it at stock voltages and a couple hundred MHz.
EDIT2: Not that it will make a difference in this testing, but you do know you are running RT for hex cores right? Run the regular EXE and you wont have that extra space on the side.
EDIT3: Part of it is my fault as I didn't share an empirical testing method and agreed to the raised voltage and 600MHz... my fault. After thinking about it, that makes sense considering what Aquinas said in how it works. The more voltage used, the higher the temps will raise (quadratic). So it makes sense the higher the voltage you have to start, the more the temps will raise with clockspeed increases. With less starting voltage, the temperature increase will not be as dramatic.
Done editing, LOL!
EDIT4: (I lied, didn't want to double post) - I will get screenshots later tonight, but I ran XTU stress test for 5 minutes at 4.25 Ghz 1.19v then 4Ghz 1.19v ("couple hundred" MHz difference). Here were the differences between the cores - 0/1/0/-1/1/0 (where -1 means the core was warmer at slower speed. I then dropped to 3.75Ghz 1.19v and here were the differences against the 4.25 GHz... 2/2/3/3/2/1. So 500 Mhz difference was within 1-3C. Again, PROPER SS's later with the proper screens (CPUz, etc) longer testing. This was quick and dirty and a sanity check for me, LOL!