The last PC I built was with a 9700K about 3 years ago. Overclocking with that processor on the ASROCK Z390 board was a piece of cake. 1.28V at 5.0 GHz all core. No issues.
I've been in this hobby for 10 years so I'm somewhat familiar to it but haven't kept up with the recent offerings.
I've been itching to build a powerful mini ITX build for a while and with nearly all the components on sale, I caved . I'm using the Asus ROG STRIX Z590-I GAMING WIFI ITX with the 11700K.
With everything stock in BIOS, running a stress test in AIDA64 the VCORE will jump to up to 1.41V. It will typcially settle in the high 1.3V range.
Running Cinebench, single core test, the VCORE stays in the 1.42V to 1.47V range, but running multi core it falls back down to the low 1.3V range (temp in mid 50s).
I am running the latest BIOS available from ASUS.
After lots of tinkering, it seems the Asus Multicore Enhancement option is half the equation.
Set to off, everything else stock, with the CPU under load all core AIDA64 stress test, the all core range in frequency is 4.0 - 4.2 GHz. VCORE is 1.2V range.
Set to on, voltage is high 1.3V range (with blips above 1.4V) but cores are now all at 4.6 GHz under load.
One strange thing here is that with Cinebench single core test, the VCORE is always in the 1.4V range, regardless of Asus MCE being on or off. The core frequencies are 50, 50, 49, 49, 47, 47, 46, 46 (they vary dynamically like they should)
Setting Asus MCE to off is supposed to keep things within Intel's limits … but Intel advertises this chip as 4.6GHz all core … which is only possible with Asus MCE set to ON, which bypasses Intel's limits. What gives? Is my chip defective?
With Asus MCE off, CPU temp is mid 50Cs with max core temp low 70Cs.
With Asus MCE on, CPU temp is mid 70Cs with max core temp low 90Cs with just a little bit of throttling.
Case is NZXT H1 which comes with a 140mm AIO. Having the side panels on or off doesn't matter much here.
In the past I'd never let a CPU run above 1.3V (debate on safe daily voltage). These new CPUs have a higher voltage tolerance?
I don't mind downclocking a tad to keep things cool but I at least expected to hit the advertised all core 4.6 GHz within stock voltages.
I haven't tried any of the other typical overclocking stability tests like Prime95, Realbench, etc yet.
Any help on what's going on here with my chip?
I've been in this hobby for 10 years so I'm somewhat familiar to it but haven't kept up with the recent offerings.
I've been itching to build a powerful mini ITX build for a while and with nearly all the components on sale, I caved . I'm using the Asus ROG STRIX Z590-I GAMING WIFI ITX with the 11700K.
With everything stock in BIOS, running a stress test in AIDA64 the VCORE will jump to up to 1.41V. It will typcially settle in the high 1.3V range.
Running Cinebench, single core test, the VCORE stays in the 1.42V to 1.47V range, but running multi core it falls back down to the low 1.3V range (temp in mid 50s).
I am running the latest BIOS available from ASUS.
After lots of tinkering, it seems the Asus Multicore Enhancement option is half the equation.
Set to off, everything else stock, with the CPU under load all core AIDA64 stress test, the all core range in frequency is 4.0 - 4.2 GHz. VCORE is 1.2V range.
Set to on, voltage is high 1.3V range (with blips above 1.4V) but cores are now all at 4.6 GHz under load.
One strange thing here is that with Cinebench single core test, the VCORE is always in the 1.4V range, regardless of Asus MCE being on or off. The core frequencies are 50, 50, 49, 49, 47, 47, 46, 46 (they vary dynamically like they should)
Setting Asus MCE to off is supposed to keep things within Intel's limits … but Intel advertises this chip as 4.6GHz all core … which is only possible with Asus MCE set to ON, which bypasses Intel's limits. What gives? Is my chip defective?
With Asus MCE off, CPU temp is mid 50Cs with max core temp low 70Cs.
With Asus MCE on, CPU temp is mid 70Cs with max core temp low 90Cs with just a little bit of throttling.
Case is NZXT H1 which comes with a 140mm AIO. Having the side panels on or off doesn't matter much here.
In the past I'd never let a CPU run above 1.3V (debate on safe daily voltage). These new CPUs have a higher voltage tolerance?
I don't mind downclocking a tad to keep things cool but I at least expected to hit the advertised all core 4.6 GHz within stock voltages.
I haven't tried any of the other typical overclocking stability tests like Prime95, Realbench, etc yet.
Any help on what's going on here with my chip?
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