- Joined
- Jun 7, 2018
- Messages
- 172 (0.07/day)
System Name | Carbon-14900K |
---|---|
Processor | Intel i9-14900K |
Motherboard | MSI Z790 Carbon Wifi |
Cooling | Arctic Liquid Freezer III 360mm AIO |
Memory | G-Skill Trident Z5 4 x 16GB DDR5 6800 |
Video Card(s) | Palit Game Rock RTX 4090 |
Storage | Western digital Black SN850X 1&2TB - PCIe Gen 4 M.2-2 Western Digital Blue 1TB SN750 PCIe Gen 3 |
Display(s) | MSI Optix MPG341CQR Ulta-wide 3440x1440p 144Hz and a Samsung 50 inch TV 4K TV |
Case | NZXT H7 Flow |
Audio Device(s) | Creative Sound Blaster X4 |
Power Supply | NZXT C1200w Gold |
Mouse | Corsair M65 Pro Mouse |
Keyboard | Corsair STRAFE MK2 RGB |
Software | Windows 11 Pro |
Benchmark Scores | Cinebench R23 = 41070 Multicore test |
For me it has always been Vcore. You can also look at VROUT (which is probably a little more accurate). VID when everything is on auto is what is being requested but gets modified by a few parameters including LLC, Power states like EIST/C1E temps etc which when looking at vcore is the actual voltage being used. As soon as you start changing settings like fixed, adaptive, offsets etc, then VID becomes less relavent. For both Intel and AMD VID is just a value that the CPU pulls from a programmed table of Multiplier/Voltage, and the mobo uses this to determine what Auto voltage it should set.This is the thing I don't get, I mean people concerned about VID being high. Isn't VID exactly what you say, so voltage CPU asks for, but one it gets being Vcore, so Vcore should be the one to concern? Btw what exact voltages are the ones to be concerned in the matter of this whole instability drama?
Can be real confusing and I am not any sort of expert so if there are any CPU engineers on TechPowerUp please jump in to help...