That's good to know. On mine it does
a very big one.
Let me add to this post to try and answer a bit more. I saw all your questions
@Knoxx29 and am trying not to answer them all one by one
I put a link in there, and noted next to most of my line items why I did what I did, most is already answered.
But, I can see you have a similar board to me with the same model CPU. Just because they are similar, does not make them the same. If you are looking at validating your OC settings by comparing to mine, that could take a while. I only listed what worked for me, and what I found to be solid for me after a few days of rigiourous back and forth and testing for AVX vs non AVX loads and watching like a hawk my VID, vcore temps etc...... Few things to keep in mind for us would be BIOS versions, technically neither one of us listed. I am on the latest 1003, but made all my OC settings on 0802 (and updated later), that can make a big difference on how voltages and VRM's etc.. act on a board. Also our VID's are likely different, same reason some chips are great clockers, and some are not.
Nevertheless, here you are:
Works fine to load the profile, notice I said did "not" click yes to load "all" adjustments
As I noted, I could remove this and go back to 0, which I will be doing in the end as I am 5.0 stable across the board, no need to offset. I read in a few threads on the interwebs as well that there is a suspicion that BIOS detection of AVX may not be the most accurate, and could be down-clocking unnecessarily.
Of course, sync all cores
5.0 ghz
this is LLC for the CPU itself (different from AC/DC IA). I am using LLC to "stabilize" my load ramps. It ramps up and down now exactly the same every time, and I know the vcore it will land on.
Provide voltage/current for a longer duration to sustain a better "hold out". Carried over from my Z170/270 clocking.
Provide voltage/current for a longer duration to sustain a better "hold out". Carried over from my Z170/270 clocking.
Without this, LLC was ramping up to almost 1.5 on a desktop boot (which if you google is common on the Z370 platform). Removing this (setting to lowest setting), tames the "Auto" beast, and now my main LLC is where I ramp to, and it is stable and predictable.
Without this, LLC was ramping up to almost 1.5 on a desktop boot (which if you google is common on the Z370 platform). Removing this (setting to lowest setting), tames the "Auto" beast, and now my main LLC is where I ramp to, and it is stable and predictable.
Without this I was noticing a fluctuation of my clocks when running a longer/sustained stress tests. It would ramp to 5, then drop to 4.5 - 4.8, then back to 5 etc. With it set, it goes up and it stays up. Different from AVX offset, this was almost like a premature down-clock.
Adaptive to get a drop in vcore states under low to no load
Core I set my target to be, then use LLC to bring up the read end under load
Hopefully that helps you, my hands are tired now.