Power Consumption and Temperatures
Stock CPU, 3600 MHz Memory |
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CPU Voltage: | 1.217 V |
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DRAM Voltage: | 1.35 V |
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Idle Power: | 7 W |
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Load Power: | 181 W |
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VRM Temperature: | 38.5°C |
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Chipset Temperature: | 41.7°C |
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4.9 GHz CPU, 3600 MHz Memory |
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CPU Voltage: | 1.382 V |
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DRAM Voltage: | 1.35 V |
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Idle Power: | 33 W |
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Load Power: | 265 W |
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With the test bench update, I have also overhauled my temperature measurement methodology. For measurement, I now use a Reed SD-947 4 channel Data Logging Thermometer paired with four Omega Engineering SA1 Self Adhesive Thermocouple probes. One probe directly touches the chipset and two are placed on select power stages. The last probe actively logs the ambient temperature.
For the MSI MEG Z490 Godlike, one probe is centered along each bank of power stages. A probe is left out to log the ambient temperature. All temperatures are presented as Delta-T normalized to 20 °C, which is the measured temperature minus the ambient temperature plus 20 °C. The end result accounts for variation in ambient temperature (including changes over the course of a test) while presenting the data as if the ambient were a steady 20 °C for easy presentation. Additionally, there is no longer any direct airflow over the VRM with this new setup, placing extra strain on the VRM cooling.
For the numbers seen in the chart above, I use wPrime for both temperature and power draw. However, relatively short tests do not put enough strain on the system to get a look at how the VRM performs at the limit, so I added an additional test to try to thermally abuse Vcore as much as possible.
This test typically involves 30 minutes of Prime95 run at the maximum overclock the motherboard can maintain, again with no airflow over the VRM. For Z490, I took a slightly different approach. The goal was to keep the VRM testing as fair as possible, so I chose to keep the stock 4.9 GHz frequency and simply boosted the voltage to 1.38 V in order to get the desired power output of about 250 W. The temperatures are logged every second, and the two probes are then averaged for a cleaner presentation before subtracting the ambient to calculate the Delta-T. The results are charted below.
It should be no surprise that the MSI MEG Z490 Godlike did extremely well in my VRM torture testing. The top-tier 90 A power stages really do make a difference. While the VRM fan was not loud during testing, I still went ahead and ran the test with it disabled.
The result is a small increase in maximum temperatures. MSI has been clever, designing the VRM fan to pull in cool air from outside the case. On an open test bench, this offers no advantage. Given the quiet nature of the fan, I would recommend leaving the fan settings at stock.
It may seem odd that the MSI MEG Z490 Godlike displays higher temperatures than the Z490 Unify since the two have the same power stages. The Unify uses a much larger heatsink. While the Unify's solution has better overall temperatures, the Godlike's finned heat sink gives it better agility and more flexibility.