• Welcome to TechPowerUp Forums, Guest! Please check out our forum guidelines for info related to our community.

Intel Statement on 13th and 14th Gen Core Instability: Faulty Microcode Causes Excessive Voltages, Fix Out Soon

Joined
Aug 17, 2023
Messages
75 (0.16/day)
But how this microcode was tested? (It was tested like the famous Crowdstrike driver ...) I mean it's pretty basic task to test voltages and temperatures at the engineering phases, how the hell they not catched the faulty microcode?
 
Joined
Feb 20, 2019
Messages
8,298 (3.93/day)
System Name Bragging Rights
Processor Atom Z3735F 1.33GHz
Motherboard It has no markings but it's green
Cooling No, it's a 2.2W processor
Memory 2GB DDR3L-1333
Video Card(s) Gen7 Intel HD (4EU @ 311MHz)
Storage 32GB eMMC and 128GB Sandisk Extreme U3
Display(s) 10" IPS 1280x800 60Hz
Case Veddha T2
Audio Device(s) Apparently, yes
Power Supply Samsung 18W 5V fast-charger
Mouse MX Anywhere 2
Keyboard Logitech MX Keys (not Cherry MX at all)
VR HMD Samsung Oddyssey, not that I'd plug it into this though....
Software W10 21H1, barely
Benchmark Scores I once clocked a Celeron-300A to 564MHz on an Abit BE6 and it scored over 9000.
Every Intel i9 since 10th gen has just felt like the old days of AMD's Piledriver-based FX-9590 - an inferior architecture that's overclocked to within an inch of its life at ridiculously inefficient and overheating power limits. We know Intel has been behind in IPC for years now, and their solution is to just add more voltage. This wasn't a mistake, it was Intel pushing things way too far and it biting them in the ass - they gambled and lost.

I think if you've bought a "253W" Intel CPU in the last half-decade, you've known what you're getting yourself into and hopefully you've either bought the 350W+ motherboard and ridiculous cooler needed to accommodate it, or you've gone into your BIOS and enforced your own, strict limits on how much trouble your "253W" processor can actually get itself into by locking PL1 and PL2 to reasonable values for your cooling and preferred noise levels. Sure, you're not going to get the same performance as the published benchmarks show when the CPU can actually guzzle >300W but at just 150W the 12th/13th/14th gen CPUs aren't actually bad at all; They're simply ruined by extremely inefficient overvolt/overclocks right out of the box by Intel.
 
Joined
Nov 13, 2007
Messages
10,775 (1.73/day)
Location
Austin Texas
System Name stress-less
Processor 9800X3D @ 5.42GHZ
Motherboard MSI PRO B650M-A Wifi
Cooling Thermalright Phantom Spirit EVO
Memory 64GB DDR5 6000 CL30-36-36-76
Video Card(s) RTX 4090 FE
Storage 2TB WD SN850, 4TB WD SN850X
Display(s) Alienware 32" 4k 240hz OLED
Case Jonsbo Z20
Audio Device(s) Yes
Power Supply Corsair SF750
Mouse DeathadderV2 X Hyperspeed
Keyboard 65% HE Keyboard
Software Windows 11
Benchmark Scores They're pretty good, nothing crazy.
But how this microcode was tested? (It was tested like the famous Crowdstrike driver ...) I mean it's pretty basic task to test voltages and temperatures at the engineering phases, how the hell they not catched the faulty microcode?
Because they probably tested on an Intel Test Motherboard and didn't have these issues.
 
Joined
Jun 20, 2024
Messages
373 (2.26/day)
Ignored Mod Warning
Every Intel i9 since 10th gen has just felt like the old days of AMD's Piledriver-based FX-9590 - an inferior architecture that's overclocked to within an inch of its life at ridiculously inefficient and overheating power limits. We know Intel has been behind in IPC for years now, and their solution is to just add more voltage. This wasn't a mistake, it was Intel pushing things way too far and it biting them in the ass - they gambled and lost.

I think if you've bought a "253W" Intel CPU in the last half-decade, you've known what you're getting yourself into and hopefully you've either bought the 350W+ motherboard and ridiculous cooler needed to accommodate it, or you've gone into your BIOS and enforced your own, strict limits on how much trouble your "253W" processor can actually get itself into by locking PL1 and PL2 to reasonable values for your cooling and preferred noise levels.
I always thought it amusing how when AMD released the 220W TDP 9590 everyone (somewhat fairly) laughed at it. It had a massive TDP and still didn't really push the performance envelope, but Intel release 253W CPUs and it's all fine and dandy... I'm guessing because it did actually top a few benchmarks so it got a reprieve... but really it should have been laughed at in the same vein.
TechPowerUp have done some power limited benchmarking which to Intel's credit does show that behind the process gap there is some good IPC capability, but as a product I'm amazed so many people have bought these K/KS SKUs...
I feel bad for those who have more normal CPUs... especially those with T series chips which are meant to be lower power... they should really be nowhere near an 'excess voltage' problem.
 
Joined
Feb 20, 2019
Messages
8,298 (3.93/day)
System Name Bragging Rights
Processor Atom Z3735F 1.33GHz
Motherboard It has no markings but it's green
Cooling No, it's a 2.2W processor
Memory 2GB DDR3L-1333
Video Card(s) Gen7 Intel HD (4EU @ 311MHz)
Storage 32GB eMMC and 128GB Sandisk Extreme U3
Display(s) 10" IPS 1280x800 60Hz
Case Veddha T2
Audio Device(s) Apparently, yes
Power Supply Samsung 18W 5V fast-charger
Mouse MX Anywhere 2
Keyboard Logitech MX Keys (not Cherry MX at all)
VR HMD Samsung Oddyssey, not that I'd plug it into this though....
Software W10 21H1, barely
Benchmark Scores I once clocked a Celeron-300A to 564MHz on an Abit BE6 and it scored over 9000.
I always thought it amusing how when AMD released the 220W TDP 9590 everyone (somewhat fairly) laughed at it. It had a massive TDP and still didn't really push the performance envelope, but Intel release 253W CPUs and it's all fine and dandy... I'm guessing because it did actually top a few benchmarks so it got a reprieve... but really it should have been laughed at in the same vein.
TechPowerUp have done some power limited benchmarking which to Intel's credit does show that behind the process gap there is some good IPC capability, but as a product I'm amazed so many people have bought these K/KS SKUs...
I feel bad for those who have more normal CPUs... especially those with T series chips which are meant to be lower power... they should really be nowhere near an 'excess voltage' problem.
Exactly. I remember 125W being the sweet spot the last time it was tested at a full range of power limits.

IIRC 12th gen at 125W power limit wasn't far off the performance of an 88W Zen3 competitor at the time, and considering it was the class-leading TSMC 7FF vs Intel's shaky 10nm "7" process, that's actually a pretty decent result, IMO.

It all went wrong when Intel decided that 350W 400W+ was an acceptable power draw for a consumer CPU.

Edit - apparently I'm out of touch. The 14900KS pulls 410W from the socket. Holy ****, batman - suddenly the 7800X3D's winning performance at around 80W makes this overclocked-to-death fiasco by Intel even sillier!
 
Last edited:
Joined
Nov 13, 2007
Messages
10,775 (1.73/day)
Location
Austin Texas
System Name stress-less
Processor 9800X3D @ 5.42GHZ
Motherboard MSI PRO B650M-A Wifi
Cooling Thermalright Phantom Spirit EVO
Memory 64GB DDR5 6000 CL30-36-36-76
Video Card(s) RTX 4090 FE
Storage 2TB WD SN850, 4TB WD SN850X
Display(s) Alienware 32" 4k 240hz OLED
Case Jonsbo Z20
Audio Device(s) Yes
Power Supply Corsair SF750
Mouse DeathadderV2 X Hyperspeed
Keyboard 65% HE Keyboard
Software Windows 11
Benchmark Scores They're pretty good, nothing crazy.
Edit - apparently I'm out of touch. The 14900KS pulls 410W from the socket. Holy ***balls, batman - suddenly the 7800X3D being a faster gaming chip whilst actually only pulling around 70-80W from the socket makes this whole "overclocked to death" fiasco look even more stupid than I already thought it was. DAMN Intel, you dun goofed!

Not to mention - the FPS increase from 5.5ghz to 6.2ghz is like 3FPS - it's in the low single digits. That last extra 200W does basically nothing for gaming.
 
Joined
Feb 18, 2005
Messages
5,847 (0.81/day)
Location
Ikenai borderline!
System Name Firelance.
Processor Threadripper 3960X
Motherboard ROG Strix TRX40-E Gaming
Cooling IceGem 360 + 6x Arctic Cooling P12
Memory 8x 16GB Patriot Viper DDR4-3200 CL16
Video Card(s) MSI GeForce RTX 4060 Ti Ventus 2X OC
Storage 2TB WD SN850X (boot), 4TB Crucial P3 (data)
Display(s) 3x AOC Q32E2N (32" 2560x1440 75Hz)
Case Enthoo Pro II Server Edition (Closed Panel) + 6 fans
Power Supply Fractal Design Ion+ 2 Platinum 760W
Mouse Logitech G602
Keyboard Razer Pro Type Ultra
Software Windows 10 Professional x64
Ignored mod warning
I always thought it amusing how when AMD released the 220W TDP 9590 everyone (somewhat fairly) laughed at it. It had a massive TDP and still didn't really push the performance envelope, but Intel release 253W CPUs and it's all fine and dandy... I'm guessing because it did actually top a few benchmarks so it got a reprieve... but really it should have been laughed at in the same vein.
TechPowerUp have done some power limited benchmarking which to Intel's credit does show that behind the process gap there is some good IPC capability, but as a product I'm amazed so many people have bought these K/KS SKUs...
I feel bad for those who have more normal CPUs... especially those with T series chips which are meant to be lower power... they should really be nowhere near an 'excess voltage' problem.
The most stupid thing about all of this is that, actually, the 13th and 14th gen Intel CPUs are good chips with decent power consumption. Dial them down to sane voltages so that they don't boost out the wazoo, and all of a sudden they become quite comparable to their previous-generation counterparts' power consumption.

The problem is that Intel was afraid of getting spanked by AMD on performance, so they let their marketing/sales department overrule their engineers and sold chips that were overclocked to hell and gone. And that makes them look better in benchmarks, but in the long run it causes stupid, expensive, trust-destroying shit like this to happen.

And then AMD went and did the exact same goddamn thing with Zen 4 and it pisses me off so much. Obviously Intel is at fault here because if they hadn't done it AMD wouldn't have, but it pisses me off because two wrongs don't make a right, they just compound stupidity. And the last thing AMD should be doing to succeed, is copying their competitor's most stupid of ideas.

Basically, I hate marketing/sales people, but more than that I hate the dysfunctional "management" at Intel that allowed this to happen at all. They should all be fired into the Sun.
 
Joined
Jan 29, 2023
Messages
1,520 (2.26/day)
Location
France
System Name KLM
Processor 7800X3D
Motherboard B-650E-E Strix
Cooling Arctic Cooling III 280
Memory 16x2 Fury Renegade 6000-32
Video Card(s) 4070-ti PNY
Storage 500+512+8+8+2+1+1+2+256+8+512+2
Display(s) VA 32" 4K@60 - OLED 27" 2K@240
Case 4000D Airflow
Audio Device(s) Edifier 1280Ts
Power Supply Shift 1000
Mouse 502 Hero
Keyboard K68
Software EMDB
Benchmark Scores 0>1000
About the watts, before the big high actual Intel powerdraws, vacuum cleaner couldn't be compared to a CPU efficiency, now it can.
 
Last edited by a moderator:
Joined
Feb 20, 2019
Messages
8,298 (3.93/day)
System Name Bragging Rights
Processor Atom Z3735F 1.33GHz
Motherboard It has no markings but it's green
Cooling No, it's a 2.2W processor
Memory 2GB DDR3L-1333
Video Card(s) Gen7 Intel HD (4EU @ 311MHz)
Storage 32GB eMMC and 128GB Sandisk Extreme U3
Display(s) 10" IPS 1280x800 60Hz
Case Veddha T2
Audio Device(s) Apparently, yes
Power Supply Samsung 18W 5V fast-charger
Mouse MX Anywhere 2
Keyboard Logitech MX Keys (not Cherry MX at all)
VR HMD Samsung Oddyssey, not that I'd plug it into this though....
Software W10 21H1, barely
Benchmark Scores I once clocked a Celeron-300A to 564MHz on an Abit BE6 and it scored over 9000.
Not to mention - the FPS increase from 5.5ghz to 6.2ghz is like 3FPS - it's in the low single digits. That last extra 200W does basically nothing for gaming.
Yeah, this is an example from W1zzard's 12th gen power scaling article, but it's basically the same thing with the same architecture out of the same foundry:

1721753270530.png


125W is only 0.8% slower than 241W, which means that even 125W is at or already beyond the point of diminishing returns; There's basically nothing left on the table after that except excessive heat and noise but Intel decided 410W was the answer and here we are today in this embarrassing mess for Intel... :\
 
Joined
Jan 29, 2023
Messages
1,520 (2.26/day)
Location
France
System Name KLM
Processor 7800X3D
Motherboard B-650E-E Strix
Cooling Arctic Cooling III 280
Memory 16x2 Fury Renegade 6000-32
Video Card(s) 4070-ti PNY
Storage 500+512+8+8+2+1+1+2+256+8+512+2
Display(s) VA 32" 4K@60 - OLED 27" 2K@240
Case 4000D Airflow
Audio Device(s) Edifier 1280Ts
Power Supply Shift 1000
Mouse 502 Hero
Keyboard K68
Software EMDB
Benchmark Scores 0>1000
They totally invested in powerplants selling power juice or it's even more nonsesnse.
 
Joined
Jun 20, 2024
Messages
373 (2.26/day)
Yeah, this is an example from W1zzard's 12th gen power scaling article, but it's basically the same thing with the same architecture out of the same foundry:

View attachment 356106

125W is only 0.8% slower than 241W, which means that even 125W is at or already beyond the point of diminishing returns; There's basically nothing left on the table after that except excessive heat and noise but Intel decided 410W was the answer and here we are today in this embarrassing mess for Intel... :\
Exactly this ^^

Hence my previous comment:
TechPowerUp have done some power limited benchmarking which to Intel's credit does show that behind the process gap there is some good IPC capability, but as a product I'm amazed so many people have bought these K/KS SKUs...

If it wasn't for the E-cores being present for example, the I5-12600K would have offered little over the plain 12600 or even the 12400.... and this same irony has persisted into Raptor Lake - the 'efficiency' E cores only present on higher TDP wasteful SKUs to eek out some cinebench wins....
 
Joined
Sep 23, 2022
Messages
1,288 (1.61/day)
Yeah, this is an example from W1zzard's 12th gen power scaling article, but it's basically the same thing with the same architecture out of the same foundry:

View attachment 356106

125W is only 0.8% slower than 241W, which means that even 125W is at or already beyond the point of diminishing returns; There's basically nothing left on the table after that except excessive heat and noise but Intel decided 410W was the answer and here we are today in this embarrassing mess for Intel... :\
That chart shows gaming performance at various power limits. The CPU isn't drawing that amount of power. What the chart tells you is that gaming on that cpu, on average, doesn't use much more than 125W, no matter the power budget given to the CPU.

Multi-core productivity is a different story.
 
Joined
Jun 20, 2024
Messages
373 (2.26/day)
And then AMD went and did the exact same goddamn thing with Zen 4 and it pisses me off so much. Obviously Intel is at fault here because if they hadn't done it AMD wouldn't have, but it pisses me off because two wrongs don't make a right, they just compound stupidity. And the last thing AMD should be doing to succeed, is copying their competitor's most stupid of ideas.

Basically, I hate marketing/sales people, but more than that I hate the dysfunctional "management" at Intel that allowed this to happen at all. They should all be fired into the Sun.
Not just Zen4... to be honest the 5800X didn't really offer a lot over the 5800 (less than 2% difference in single-threaded performance, and nearly 8% in multi-threaded) but with a 60% higher TDP... and the same was true further down the product stack.

If shopping at the low-end, people buying a Ryzen 7600X instead of a 7600 (and keeping the change for maybe a bit more RAM, bigger SSD, better GPU, or just plain old beer money) confuses me especially if they plan to upgrade....

The last few Intel generations in the latter stages of Skylake / Coffee Lake showed the K CPUs starting to offer a lot less value and diminishing returns in terms of how much you can push the envelope.... those Sandy Bridge days are looooong gone.
With Alder Lake/Raptor Lake, buying the K/KS parts really just meant buying a CPU with a higher turbo boost clock and power limit, but on a process which meant thermal limits would effectively neuter a lot of that clock speed potential. Sure, you 'can' overclock them but they are so close to the red-line that it's not as practical as it used to be.
 
Joined
Nov 26, 2021
Messages
1,648 (1.50/day)
Location
Mississauga, Canada
Processor Ryzen 7 5700X
Motherboard ASUS TUF Gaming X570-PRO (WiFi 6)
Cooling Noctua NH-C14S (two fans)
Memory 2x16GB DDR4 3200
Video Card(s) Reference Vega 64
Storage Intel 665p 1TB, WD Black SN850X 2TB, Crucial MX300 1TB SATA, Samsung 830 256 GB SATA
Display(s) Nixeus NX-EDG27, and Samsung S23A700
Case Fractal Design R5
Power Supply Seasonic PRIME TITANIUM 850W
Mouse Logitech
VR HMD Oculus Rift
Software Windows 11 Pro, and Ubuntu 20.04
Ignored mod warning
Yeah, this is an example from W1zzard's 12th gen power scaling article, but it's basically the same thing with the same architecture out of the same foundry:

View attachment 356106

125W is only 0.8% slower than 241W, which means that even 125W is at or already beyond the point of diminishing returns; There's basically nothing left on the table after that except excessive heat and noise but Intel decided 410W was the answer and here we are today in this embarrassing mess for Intel... :\
They also wanted the multithreaded performance crown and there, the lower power limit hurts competitiveness versus AMD. Thanks to more E cores, the 14900K improves upon the 12900k at lower power limits, but would still be marginally behind its competitors at comparable power draws.

1721754443689.png
 
Joined
Jul 13, 2023
Messages
158 (0.31/day)
System Name Spacewhale I (replacement of GR-1) (GR-1 = Game Rig 1 was oprational from dec 2012 until aug 2024)
Processor i7 12700K , grizzly lt contact frame, NT-H1 paste (i7 3770)
Motherboard Rog Strix B760-I (Alienware X51 Stock 2012 R1)
Cooling Noctua NH-D15S (Alienware X51 Stock 2012 R1)
Memory Kingston FURY Beast 2x16GB 6000MT/s DDR5 CL30 (Alienware X51 Stock 2012 R1)
Video Card(s) Zotac 4070 Super Twin Edge PL 70% light OC (1st GTX660 2ND 1050TI 3RD 1660 Zotac)
Storage Samsung 990 EVO 2TB (1 TB Samsung SSD Sata 1 TB Alienware stock non SSD)
Display(s) 32'' LG QHD 180Hz VA Panel (mostly runs on 60Hz perfectly)
Case Meshify 2 Nano (Alienware X51 Stock 2012 R1)
Audio Device(s) Bose Companion 20 (Since 2016)
Power Supply Ion+ 2 Platinum 560W (Alienware X51 Stock external PSU)
Mouse Razer Abyssus
Keyboard Cherry KC 6000 Slim
Software Windows 11 Pro (Windows 10)
Benchmark Scores Runs on energy saving mode, desktop idle power consumption 31 Watt
Not just Zen4... to be honest the 5800X didn't really offer a lot over the 5800 (less than 2% difference in single-threaded performance, and nearly 8% in multi-threaded) but with a 60% higher TDP... and the same was true further down the product stack.

If shopping at the low-end, people buying a Ryzen 7600X instead of a 7600 (and keeping the change for maybe a bit more RAM, bigger SSD, better GPU, or just plain old beer money) confuses me especially if they plan to upgrade....

The last few Intel generations in the latter stages of Skylake / Coffee Lake showed the K CPUs starting to offer a lot less value and diminishing returns in terms of how much you can push the envelope.... those Sandy Bridge days are looooong gone.

when talking about those am5 chipsets i saw the new pricing of the 96, 97 an so on, kind of high to my taste, bad timing intel has socket 1700 issues as platform swap into new am5 is kind of not so cheap price, swap with 7600 or x is in terms of pricing okayish.. if you dont mind the high idle power consumption which i did
 
Joined
Jun 20, 2024
Messages
373 (2.26/day)
when talking about those am5 chipsets i saw the new pricing of the 96, 97 an so on, kind of high to my taste, bad timing intel has socket 1700 issues as platform swap into new am5 is kind of not so cheap price, swap with 7600 or x is in terms of pricing okayish.. if you dont mind the high idle power consumption which i did
At this point in time I'd take the 10W higher idle than the 2-3 times higher high load power usage....
It probably isn't even that measurable at the power socket due to the increasing efficiency of PSUs as power load ramps up... even 80plus platinum PSUs are not very good under 10% of their power rating in most cases.
 
Joined
Jan 29, 2023
Messages
1,520 (2.26/day)
Location
France
System Name KLM
Processor 7800X3D
Motherboard B-650E-E Strix
Cooling Arctic Cooling III 280
Memory 16x2 Fury Renegade 6000-32
Video Card(s) 4070-ti PNY
Storage 500+512+8+8+2+1+1+2+256+8+512+2
Display(s) VA 32" 4K@60 - OLED 27" 2K@240
Case 4000D Airflow
Audio Device(s) Edifier 1280Ts
Power Supply Shift 1000
Mouse 502 Hero
Keyboard K68
Software EMDB
Benchmark Scores 0>1000
Intel doesn't looks like interested in x3d equivalent.
 

Solaris17

Super Dainty Moderator
Staff member
Joined
Aug 16, 2005
Messages
26,989 (3.83/day)
Location
Alabama
System Name RogueOne
Processor Xeon W9-3495x
Motherboard ASUS w790E Sage SE
Cooling SilverStone XE360-4677
Memory 128gb Gskill Zeta R5 DDR5 RDIMMs
Video Card(s) MSI SUPRIM Liquid X 4090
Storage 1x 2TB WD SN850X | 2x 8TB GAMMIX S70
Display(s) 49" Philips Evnia OLED (49M2C8900)
Case Thermaltake Core P3 Pro Snow
Audio Device(s) Moondrop S8's on schitt Gunnr
Power Supply Seasonic Prime TX-1600
Mouse Lamzu Maya Grey
Keyboard Monsgeek M3 Lavender, Moondrop Luna lights
VR HMD Quest 3
Software Windows 11 Pro Workstation
Benchmark Scores I dont have time for that.
A few more notches. You can complain about Intel all you want but AMD has nothing to do with this.
 

eidairaman1

The Exiled Airman
Joined
Jul 2, 2007
Messages
42,316 (6.65/day)
Location
Republic of Texas (True Patriot)
System Name PCGOD
Processor AMD FX 8350@ 5.0GHz
Motherboard Asus TUF 990FX Sabertooth R2 2901 Bios
Cooling Scythe Ashura, 2×BitFenix 230mm Spectre Pro LED (Blue,Green), 2x BitFenix 140mm Spectre Pro LED
Memory 16 GB Gskill Ripjaws X 2133 (2400 OC, 10-10-12-20-20, 1T, 1.65V)
Video Card(s) AMD Radeon 290 Sapphire Vapor-X
Storage Samsung 840 Pro 256GB, WD Velociraptor 1TB
Display(s) NEC Multisync LCD 1700V (Display Port Adapter)
Case AeroCool Xpredator Evil Blue Edition
Audio Device(s) Creative Labs Sound Blaster ZxR
Power Supply Seasonic 1250 XM2 Series (XP3)
Mouse Roccat Kone XTD
Keyboard Roccat Ryos MK Pro
Software Windows 7 Pro 64
Nvidia Bumpgate ~2008. Permanently ruined their relationship with Apple. Nvidia blamed TSMC for it.
Detonator drivers causing gpus to go boom
 
Joined
Jul 20, 2020
Messages
1,135 (0.71/day)
System Name Gamey #1 / #3
Processor Ryzen 7 5800X3D / Ryzen 7 5700X3D
Motherboard Asrock B450M P4 / MSi B450 ProVDH M
Cooling IDCool SE-226-XT / IDCool SE-224-XTS
Memory 32GB 3200 CL16 / 16GB 3200 CL16
Video Card(s) PColor 6800 XT / GByte RTX 3070
Storage 4TB Team MP34 / 2TB WD SN570
Display(s) LG 32GK650F 1440p 144Hz VA
Case Corsair 4000Air / TT Versa H18
Audio Device(s) Dragonfly Black
Power Supply EVGA 650 G3 / EVGA BQ 500
Mouse JSCO JNL-101k Noiseless
Keyboard Steelseries Apex 3 TKL
Software Win 10, Throttlestop
At this point in time I'd take the 10W higher idle than the 2-3 times higher high load power usage....
It probably isn't even that measurable at the power socket due to the increasing efficiency of PSUs as power load ramps up... even 80plus platinum PSUs are not very good under 10% of their power rating in most cases.

I think you can "have it all" if you're interested in managing your CPU a little more than the average user. I do this with my i7-9700F and run it at 4.2 GHz (plus UV) as it's more efficient there instead of the full all-core 4.5 GHz. Same will be true of an i7-14700. It already "only" goes to 5.4 GHz and you can further tune lower on clock speed and voltage to find your preferred efficiency point. Or get the 14700K for theoretically better binning for lower voltage at the same clock speed. I'd wait until this Raptor Lake debacle is fully addressed or really wait until next gen from both corps for any improved efficiencies though.

I appreciate my i7's low idle power usage when adjusted and I appreciate my R7 5700X3D's (and 5800X3D) low gaming power usage with no adjustments. That said, the idle difference is barely 10W as you mention and games really seem to like 8C8T as much as X3D as long as CPU usage stays under about 90%.
 
Joined
Mar 21, 2021
Messages
5,093 (3.77/day)
Location
Colorado, U.S.A.
System Name CyberPowerPC ET8070
Processor Intel Core i5-10400F
Motherboard Gigabyte B460M DS3H AC-Y1
Memory 2 x Crucial Ballistix 8GB DDR4-3000
Video Card(s) MSI Nvidia GeForce GTX 1660 Super
Storage Boot: Intel OPTANE SSD P1600X Series 118GB M.2 PCIE
Display(s) Dell P2416D (2560 x 1440)
Power Supply EVGA 500W1 (modified to have two bridge rectifiers)
Software Windows 11 Home
Joined
Jan 29, 2023
Messages
1,520 (2.26/day)
Location
France
System Name KLM
Processor 7800X3D
Motherboard B-650E-E Strix
Cooling Arctic Cooling III 280
Memory 16x2 Fury Renegade 6000-32
Video Card(s) 4070-ti PNY
Storage 500+512+8+8+2+1+1+2+256+8+512+2
Display(s) VA 32" 4K@60 - OLED 27" 2K@240
Case 4000D Airflow
Audio Device(s) Edifier 1280Ts
Power Supply Shift 1000
Mouse 502 Hero
Keyboard K68
Software EMDB
Benchmark Scores 0>1000
Joined
Apr 24, 2020
Messages
2,710 (1.61/day)
Microcode is hardware, as far as I'm concerned.

Just because its software internal to the CPU doesn't change the fact that its largely unavailable to typical programmers. Its effectively part of the CPU.

-------

I've said it before: "Division" (and modulus) are both operations that are almost-always implemented as microcode rather than pure hardware. From the perspective of modern programmers, the "div" and "idiv" instructions are effectively a hardware implementation. Microcode does a lot in modern CPUs because of how hugely complex these modern processors are.
 

aytokpatop

New Member
Joined
Mar 8, 2022
Messages
25 (0.03/day)
Very high VID Voltages may be the cause....
In my case (14700KF) i'm suffering from OS file corruption fixed via sfc /scannow.
 
Last edited:
Top