- Joined
- Jun 19, 2018
- Messages
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System Name | Batman's CaseLabs Mercury S8 Work Computer |
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Processor | 8086K 5.3Ghz binned delidded by Siliconlottery.com 5.5Ghz 6c12t 5.6Ghz 6c6t on ambient air |
Motherboard | EVGA Z390 DARK |
Cooling | Noctua C14S for all overclocking so far Noctua Industrial PWM fan 2000rpm rated (700rpm inaudible) |
Memory | Gskill Trident Z Royal Silver F4-4600C18D-16GTRS running at 4500Mhz 17-17-17-37 (new mem OC) : ) |
Video Card(s) | AMD WX 4100 Workstation Card (AMD W5400 7nm workstation card coming soon) |
Storage | Intel Optane 900P 280GB PCIe card as Primary OS drive / (4) Samsung 860Pro 256GB SATA internal |
Display(s) | Planar 27in 2560x1440 Glossy LG panel with glass bonded to panel for increased clarity |
Case | CaseLabs Mercury S8 open bench chassis two-tone black front cover with gunmetal frame |
Audio Device(s) | Creative $25 2.1 speakers lol |
Power Supply | Seasonic Prime Titanium 700watt fanless |
Mouse | Logitech MX Master 3 graphite / Glorious Model D matte black / Razer Invicta mousing mat gunmetal |
Keyboard | HHKB Hybrid Type-S black printed keycaps |
Software | Work Apps text and statistical |
Benchmark Scores | Single Thread scores at 5.6Ghz: Cinebench R15 ST - 249 CPU-Z ST - 676 PassMark CPU ST - 3389 |
Yeah, but that is not a problem that AIDA causes. Its a problem your unstable OC causes. So one could say AIDA is good at catching unstable OCs.
I have run for a few hours with a technically unstable mem OC and SpeedStep remains active and functioning.
Then run AIDA 64 along with the unstable mem OC and Speedstep no longer functions.
It's just a possible issue to be aware of and if it happens a good workaround is to use a separate or dedicated SATA or M.2 or any drive that you can easily reformat if necessary.
I'm only answering the guy's question, that's all.
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Also, I've had many AIDA 64 mem latency benchmark runs complete without issues that are extremely unstable.
It just depends your own personal definition of stability OR the level of stability you wish or want for your system.
Memtest below is probably the most difficult mem stability test to pass - that I've used.
Rule of thumb for Memtest:
100% would be a single pass of the allocated ram per instance, so 10 passes is a good mark of stability.
Typically if you can get that far, you're not going to see a memory error in normal use.
This is what many overclockers use as a guide. Lots of memory stability tests out there not as demanding. Pick your poison. lol
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