Really? Where? I haven't found anything like that so far.
It's under the "AMD" settings as CPCC, or something like that
I've seen it on a few boards with the modern AGESAS, even on my x370
Then how come that the coolest core is also on that die ? I've watched a gamer nexus review and they found the same huge deltas between cores.
It's either the cooler contacting poorly there or the solder from the CPU to the heatspreader is poor there
Remember the dies are offset, the cores arent in the center - this is why i lapped my 5800x, to even those things out.
So yesterday I dropped my X3D into my kids system thinking it would be a solid bump for him, coming from a 5600X.. he didn’t even notice lol.. so I was a bit chuffed and I gave him back his 5600X today lol
Still doesn’t notice
To be fair, you need a pretty high end setup to notice most of it - and obviously, the 5600x isn't a slouch at all with anything less a 4090
Oh AMD have been updating their website adding recommended RAM setups to all the CPU pages, and i adore them for fixing this
This has helped me so much with explaining to people that no, your Zen+ APU can't run DDR4 4400 just because the motherboard supports it under "OC", and yes thats why you're having blackscreens/crashes/problems
Not all CPU's have it listed, the 5800x just says "upto 3200" for example while the 5800x3D and 3400g have it
Honestly.. out of my 3 chips my 5600X is probably still my favorite.
the 5700x system i helped build is still right up there for me, that thing ran on AA batteries and could almost be passively cooled (Definitely could for pure gaming)
A question for amd gigabyte boards. I have all old 3pin voltage fans, which used to ramp up and down all over all the time, until I flattened the curve as per Mussels recommendation.
Just curious, if PWM fans would be less susceptible to this or not?
PWM fans still need curve adjustments, the key is that they're less prone to weird noises at different settings, since its 12V all the time (just pulsing) so they dont have the need to start at 100% jet engine speed and slow down, for example
So you can simplify it that 12V PWM fans often have a broader min-max RPM range and less noise issues at lower settings, but as always the fans themselves dictate a lot of that anyway
(A 140mm fan might not start at 6V on a 3 pin header, but would run fine at 50% on PWM - same RPM, but no issues)