Lol.
We're talking 24/7 manual voltages. Not boost states. The boost states is dependend on current. If the current goes up too high then the boost voltage will lower. Lmao man. Your a joke.
360mm AIO are more towards exotic and not budget cooling. That is if you have a decent set with a push/pull configuration going on. Because the chips are made on 7nm, it is more difficult then to cool a 32nm vishera for that matter. You can push alot more current through a 32nm chip and have it well cooled under 60 degrees with a 360mm rad, but with 7nm it's a different ballpark.
These cpu's start to behave like small nuclear plants. Tremendous amount of heat coming out of one tiny area. Intel suffers from the same issues, esp their K series and all that. They are just difficult to cool at a certain point and that hardens the proces of a succesfull overclock. Apart from that, 7nm is very slim, small, tiny, high current could actually brake it way faster then high currents flowing through a Bulldozer FX at 5GHz absorbing 220W like it's breakfast.
Your just plain wrong. The 1.5V in a boost state is a temporary and not a permanent voltage supplied to the CPU. People who put manual overclocks with a pre-set voltage are the ones who suffer. That is exactly where all these reviews are about. https://www.techpowerup.com/review/asus-rog-crosshair-viii-hero-wifi/14.html
TPU: 1.4V. All these review websites send out a wrong signal. 1.4V is'nt for 24/7 usage. Oh you can run a succesfull benchmark tho for a short period of time, but this is'nt 32nm anymore. These cpu show signs of degrade already in weeks once overvolted too much.
We're talking 24/7 manual voltages. Not boost states. The boost states is dependend on current. If the current goes up too high then the boost voltage will lower. Lmao man. Your a joke.
360mm AIO are more towards exotic and not budget cooling. That is if you have a decent set with a push/pull configuration going on. Because the chips are made on 7nm, it is more difficult then to cool a 32nm vishera for that matter. You can push alot more current through a 32nm chip and have it well cooled under 60 degrees with a 360mm rad, but with 7nm it's a different ballpark.
These cpu's start to behave like small nuclear plants. Tremendous amount of heat coming out of one tiny area. Intel suffers from the same issues, esp their K series and all that. They are just difficult to cool at a certain point and that hardens the proces of a succesfull overclock. Apart from that, 7nm is very slim, small, tiny, high current could actually brake it way faster then high currents flowing through a Bulldozer FX at 5GHz absorbing 220W like it's breakfast.
Your just plain wrong. The 1.5V in a boost state is a temporary and not a permanent voltage supplied to the CPU. People who put manual overclocks with a pre-set voltage are the ones who suffer. That is exactly where all these reviews are about. https://www.techpowerup.com/review/asus-rog-crosshair-viii-hero-wifi/14.html
TPU: 1.4V. All these review websites send out a wrong signal. 1.4V is'nt for 24/7 usage. Oh you can run a succesfull benchmark tho for a short period of time, but this is'nt 32nm anymore. These cpu show signs of degrade already in weeks once overvolted too much.
Last edited: