12-02-2024 01:40 AM
Hello, i got new Computer this year that had problems with temps from the start, i lowered temps by doing -0.065 global core SVID voltage, it helped alot, max temp in cinebench was from 100c to 78c(in summer), bios 1656.
Now after updating the bios to the latest 1805, I have temperatures in cinebench close to 98c(in winter, so in summer it will be 100c for sure) and I can't lower them anymore with globalcore SVID anymore, tried VRM core voltage and got same results.
Fans are running weirdly like for no reason while gaming it start to go MAX Speed and then back to normal and this repeats with some pause in between. Before the update the fans were more stable..
I was thinking of trying to downgrade the bios, but I'm scared and confused about the microcode update, I don't want the new processor to get corrupted.
What should i do ? Can anybody help me please what should i do to lower temps ? Or with good temps, is it safe to be on older bios version without microcode ?
No BSODS to this moment and only bios tweak are XMP1 and -0.065 global core SVID
PC Setup:
ASUS TUF GAMING Z790-PLUS WIFI - Intel Z790
Intel Core i9-14900K
ASUS ROG-STRIX-RTX3080-O10G WHITE-V2 (LHR) 10GB GDDR6X
Arctic Liquid Freezer II 420
Kingston FURY Renegade RGB Silver/Black 96GB (2x48GB) DDR5 6000 CL32
Seasonic Focus GX 1000, ATX 3.0 - 1000W
Crucial T500, M.2 - 1TB
Fractal Design Meshify 2 XL Black TG Light Tint
Fractal Design Aspect 14 RGB PWM Black Frame 3-pack (used in AiO front case)
12-11-2024 11:11 AM - edited 12-11-2024 11:15 AM
It honestly sounds more like you don’t understand your own companies motherboards and how to alter the systems within it. Now changing svid behavior “should” change the ACLL but in fact quite a few people have done testing and found it’s not hence the reason to throw a negative in and lower it manually after changing the behavior.
either way I bring up fans because your own coworker you tried defending tried stating that OP required better cooling and again passed the buck off to them for fault with the issue.
Fact of the matter is you keep glossing over that all the other manufacturers aren’t having this issue whereas ASUS motherboards are. Instead of reporting it up the food chain to have it looked into you want to argue.
Regardless I’m the only one in this thread that gave any semblance of actual help for again the NORMAL customer using your products. You are simply stating things that enthusiasts would alter.
Maybe come up with better customer support solutions instead of saying obscure facts or passing blame off. That goes for both you @Silent_Scone and @Jiaszzz_ROG I’m fine with you deleting all my comments but do me a favor and leave the one letting OP know that they can reduce the full strain on their rig by turning turbo boost off considering ASUS boards run it at maximum any time the cpu is called for.
12-11-2024 12:36 PM - edited 12-11-2024 12:52 PM
I'm happy to leave the comments up - you've not said anything that warrants deleting. When it's simply educational, no need.
All the latest BIOS is doing is following the same impedance as Intel recommends - you're trying to posture that as if they're doing something they shouldn't. If they are, you've failed to explain what that is. Throwing weight around as if it's poor customer service to question cooling capability when a user is struggling to cool a CPU at stock is madness, and I'd advise you to rethink. My system had no issues doing so.
If struggling to cool the CPU now, then CS is right to question cooling capability or whether there is a proper mount. These chips run hot.
Again, best to start your thread if you have your own questions. If behavioural settings no longer have an impact on 0x12B then this will likely be by design (I had no problems on 0x129).
Auto ACLL
Typical Behaviour
12-12-2024 06:52 AM
Thank you for respond,
No different results after clearing cmos and with no XMP and other adjustments.
1. CPU is securely installed and thermal paste is good.
2 i have 8 140x140 fans running, im not sure how to make better airflow, im not even using heater in this room so there is always low temaputer in the room
Any other ideas ?
12-16-2024 08:08 AM
Have you considered a contact frame? Inspect core temperature delta to see how much higher certain cores are than others. A contact frame can help negate some of the impacts of IHS convexity.
12-10-2024 10:18 PM - edited 12-10-2024 10:20 PM
@Matthew5 hey guy something that may help you by a tremendous amount and make your cpu last a lot longer of a life is going into your bios and disabling Intel turbo boost.
I know this may be a hard pill to swallow but honestly it does little impact to how quickly things load and with your current setup you’ll see very little impact on gaming with it disabled. The major impact you will see is a decrease of about 30-40c on your cpu temp. At Idle you should be around 25-32c and during gaming 32-45c with your rig. With a 14900k it’ll show you going from roughly 5500ghz - 6000 down to 3200-3600. For some reason with the turbo boost enabled paired with an asus board I’ve found that it always wants to jump to the maximum 6000 in my case which causes massive temp spiking. I’ve tested this with MSI and Gigabyte boards and they don’t jump to maximums but scale up in a smooth transition with turbo enabled and with it disabled they also maintain a stead max of around 3200 and temps stay roughly where I said they would.
Now you may be worried your going to lose a bunch of fps by dropping it trust me you won’t lose anything that you can physically see with your eyes. Cyberpunk on my rig still runs ultra with ray tracing at a steady 100fps, WoW runs over 180fps, all my shooters cod,battlefield,etc over 140fps.
It’s a huge misconception especially in the overclocking world that a person must have everything tuned for maximum performance and YouTubers have made it even worse.
test it out and see if you notice a draw back and let me know. Good luck and I hope this helps you unlike @Jiaszzz_ROG
12-12-2024 07:08 AM
Thanks for your respond too and trrying helping me.
Im running multipletasks at once like modeling, rendering, graphic work, etc.. and gaming at same time. Thats why i wanted best CPU on market at that moment and i had intel before so i was going with them again... I can test it with turbo boost off how it will run when im at home.