Intel i7-13700K
Asus Z690 ROG Strix Gaming-E Wifi
BIOS 3901, dated 09/27/24
P-Cores 56-56-55-55-54-54-53-53, E-Cores 42, Ring 45, +1 eTVB
So last night I decided to take the plunge and apply this supposedly final microcode / BIOS update to the i7 build, and I ran into some bad luck... I had a stable overclock going with x53 all core and single cores at x56 boosting to x57 with TVB, core voltages peaking at about 1.385V give or take a little, IA_VR limited to 1400mV, CEP disabled, AC_LL 0.15, DC_LL 1.05, PL1/2 253W. After updating to 0x12B and returning to the same overclock settings, I noticed that my P-core clocks were now topping at x55, even though I had x56 configured for the first two cores along with +1 TVB, core temperatures were a few degrees higher, and a y-cruncher routine that always used to work now failed with one of those "coefficient too large" errors.
I rolled back to 3802 (0x129), and that's where I'm staying. 0x125 and 0x129 both took the same overclock settings without issue.
Asus Z690 ROG Strix Gaming-E Wifi
BIOS 3901, dated 09/27/24
P-Cores 56-56-55-55-54-54-53-53, E-Cores 42, Ring 45, +1 eTVB
So last night I decided to take the plunge and apply this supposedly final microcode / BIOS update to the i7 build, and I ran into some bad luck... I had a stable overclock going with x53 all core and single cores at x56 boosting to x57 with TVB, core voltages peaking at about 1.385V give or take a little, IA_VR limited to 1400mV, CEP disabled, AC_LL 0.15, DC_LL 1.05, PL1/2 253W. After updating to 0x12B and returning to the same overclock settings, I noticed that my P-core clocks were now topping at x55, even though I had x56 configured for the first two cores along with +1 TVB, core temperatures were a few degrees higher, and a y-cruncher routine that always used to work now failed with one of those "coefficient too large" errors.
I rolled back to 3802 (0x129), and that's where I'm staying. 0x125 and 0x129 both took the same overclock settings without issue.