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- Nov 19, 2019
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I have my 5800X up and running, and would like to do a little undervolting, however I am fairly confused.
1) How can I tell how much of an offset to set for each core? From what I read, it's during idle when too much can cause instability, so how the hell do I test that, and how can I even know what core is malfunctioning?
2) I learned there is something like quality of cores and that Hwinfo can show that, but I can't make ANY sense out of this:
View attachment 189672
What the heck does all this mean? I've already looked at Ryzen Master and cores 1 and 7 are the best, but these numbers I don't understand.
3) When taking the cores quality into consideration, which ones are to be run with higher lor lower curve offset? I keep reading conflicting information about this.
4) Is it enough to just play with the curve optimizer in my use case? My head is already like a baloon staring into the BIOS.
I have no idea what kind of sample do I have, probably utter shit, because all core boost in Prime95 is 4300MHz on average, and highest frequency frequency shown in Hwinfo over some period of time (not constant load) is 4850MHz.
Part of the confusing thing is that no one can tell you what core offset will be stable for each core on your cpu. Every cpu is different and the only way to figure it out is by testing your cpu to see what is stable and gives good results.
One thing that generally seems to be the case is that you can set a higher offset on the cores that are not rated as highly. This is why you see recommendations like set your best cores to X and all others to Y. However, even that might not be true on a single sample and so copying someone else's recommended settings is probably not going to work well.
Take a step back and first understand which are the relevant bios settings.
Then do some testing of your own to figure out what works well, while keeping an eye on temps and effective clocks in HWinfo.
I posted more details and a script here to test with prime95: https://www.overclock.net/threads/s...script-for-zen-3-curve-offset-tuning.1777112/
"I have no idea what kind of sample do I have, probably utter shit, because all core boost in Prime95 is 4300MHz on average, and highest frequency frequency shown in Hwinfo over some period of time (not constant load) is 4850MHz."
That pretty much matches my stock behavior on a 5800x, and to be honest, tuning curve offsets, while keeping things 100% stable, didn't gain very much at all. 4850MHz is the stock max boost. With a power hungry avx all core load 4300MHz is about what you will get. Disabling AVX in p95 will give higher frequencies.
Review frequencies seem to be higher. e.g. https://www.techpowerup.com/review/amd-ryzen-7-5800x/21.html
I have a feeling review samples were very good chips, but "This test uses a custom-coded application that mimics real-life performance—it is not a stress test like Prime95.", so the test used for that graph is most likely using less power (and therefore generating less heat) than prime95.