Guide: How to set good power limits in the BIOS and reduce the CPU power draw

citay

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By now, and not only since threads like these, many Intel users will have heard (or have found out) that a lot of Intel CPUs have a very high power draw that can really push the CPU cooling capabilities to the limit and beyond. There used to be a time where a cheap tower air cooler would be enough for any CPU available for that socket. That era pretty much ended with the i9-9900K, the first "monster", and then from 10th gen onwards, Intel really started pushing the higher-up CPU models to the absolute edge. Causing higher and higher power draw, which has now gotten ridiculously high with the 14th generation like the 14900K.

The way the i9 models behave nowadays, and even the latest i7, you would think you're working with a highly overclocked CPU. And in a way, that's true - overclocked from factory, to be able to compete with AMD's best offerings. A tower cooler is not sufficient at all sometimes, the insanely high power draw can even cause trouble for really good, large AIOs (water coolers). But not only i9 and i7 CPUs are this extreme nowadays, the lower models can also have a power draw that may be too much for the CPU cooler at hand.

When the power draw becomes too much for the cooling capabilities in your PC and it can no longer keep the CPU at reasonable temperatures under load, what happens? Thermal throttling. This is a mechanism that prevents the CPU from dying of overtemperature. It acts when the CPU temperature approaches 100°C and then tries save it from overheating, by (sometimes drastically) throttling the CPU, which reduces the voltages and thus the power draw and heat output, but also reduces the frequencies and thus the performance.

But it's not good to rely on that, because if it comes to that and your cooling is already maxed out (fans at high speed, good airflow through the system), it means the CPU generates more heat than the cooler can get rid of, so thermal throttling has to step in to prevent the worst. In essence, it's an emergency mechanism, not something that should be able to happen for daily use. You want power limit throttling to step in before thermal throttling ever has to. So you should 1) set power limits according to your cooling, and 2) try to reduce the CPU core voltage.

Because the high power draw comes partly from CPU voltages that are way higher than what would be required for stability. So if we can lower those voltages more to what the CPU actually needs (while still staying fully stable), everything will improve considerably. But we'll come to that in step 2).

These optimizations have become even more important when using the latest BIOS versions, as can be read here:
Explained: How the new BIOS versions are causing higher temperatures.


Before everything, i would always update the BIOS to the latest version, because it limits the potential for any CPU degradation. Update how-to:

1) Get the latest BIOS. It's the topmost one on the MSI support page for your board.
2) Extract the file and you will get a text file and the BIOS file. Put the BIOS file into the root folder of a USB stick/drive.
3) Enter the BIOS by pressing DEL during boot, go to "M-FLASH" in the BIOS.
4) Once M-Flash (the updater) is loaded, it will show a list of your drives. Select the USB stick and select the previously extracted BIOS file on there.
5) It will ask for confirmation and then update the BIOS. It's fully automatic from there, takes about two minutes.

After the update, upon first entering the BIOS again, it will show the revised cooler selection screen (which is really the power limit selection screen):

MSI_SnapShot_01 Intel Def.png


Usually you can choose the middle option, no matter if your CPU would natively want to draw more power (like an i9 would) or less power (like an i5 would). Because this middle option happens to have the maximum values i would allow for any CPU (even an i9), so it's a good basis to work off of, and lower the power limits if necessary. Meaning, if there is any thermal throttling with those limits, they have to be optimized to the individual cooling capabilities, which i will shortly explain.

MSI_SnapShot_03 MSI Performance.png


Note: The BIOS first has the values for the first option "Intel Default Settings" loaded. So after the middle option is selected, press F10 to save and exit, then the "MSI Performance Settings" are applied. Now there are 253W power limits set for the CPU (together with a 400A CPU Current limit), and in the first step, we now test what power limits are actually required for the temperatures to stay reasonable.

Should there be no cooler selection screen after the update, then that setting can be found here, under OC:

MSI_SnapShot_26.png


Again, the middle preset (nowadays it should be called "MSI Performance", that screenshot is from an older BIOS version where it was still called Boxed/Tower/Water cooler) is the correct one to work off of, meaning, to further lower the power limits from if necessary. Because the >200W limits this preset will allow can already overpower a lot of CPU coolers.



1) Test which power limits you need to set for your cooling. One way is to eyeball a number that your cooler might be able to handle comfortably (with a good tower cooler, we could say 180W for example), you set those power limits in the BIOS for a test, then you check how high the temperatures get under fully multithreaded load. If they are now in the mid-80°C range, that's good, you found your cooler's potential and you have some headroom left for higher ambient temperatures in the summer. If you still run into thermal throttling, you set the limits a bit lower.

To test the limits, check your sensors with HWinfo after ten minutes of full CPU load. Run HWinfo and open "Sensors", then expand all sensors by clicking on the little <--> arrows on the bottom, also expand the columns of the sensors a bit so everything can be read. Make it three big columns of sensors (or four, if the screen resolution is high enough). In the end, it should be a screenshot with all the sensors visible at once, like this:

yes.png


Always make sure your power plan in Windows is set to "Balanced", this is the only proper one. Leave the PC in idle for a a minute or two first to establish the "minimum" baselines for the values. Then, produce full CPU load with Cinebench (either R24 or the still-more-popular R23) by running the "CPU Multi" benchmark, and after completing a 10 minute run, when the CPU temperatures have stabilized at the highest level, check the score and the HWinfo sensor window.

CinebenchR23.jpg

Example of a Cinebench R23 run, leave HWinfo Sensors open in the background.

What are we looking at in HWinfo after the Cinebench run?
Mostly these values in the "Maximum" column (the highest recorded values during monitoring):

hwinfo_sensors.png


Now, this is from my own system, using one of the best air coolers around (Noctua NH-D15), and only using a i5-13500, which i managed to also lower the voltage (and thus power draw), we will come to that as well in step 2) below. The result is that, even under full load, i have a pretty quiet system, and in idle, i don't even hear if it's on or not. Also, it's staying well clear of any dangerous temperatures under full load, thanks to less than 110W of power draw. It doesn't get any better than that: The cooler is overkill for the CPU, so everything can be set to run very quietly, and there is no stress on anything whatsoever. I can leave the power limits maxed out in the BIOS (4096W), because the power draw is so low, and this is very far away from >90°C temperatures which would be thermal throttling territory.

But for most people it will look a bit different at first, especially with higher CPU models that draw more power. Once there's a 14th gen i7 or i9 in there, it will absolutely gulp down the electricity, we're talking 300+ Watts easily under full load (also see here). The power draw of the higher-end CPU models has gotten completely out of hand (quite similar to high-end GPUs).

So for a lot of CPUs, the power limits have to be set according to what your cooling can handle. Otherwise it may look like this:

hwinfo_sensors_2.png


This PC actually crashed after a couple seconds (in hindsight, surely having to do with the stability issues on 13th/14th gen), but just before it crashed, it managed to draw 322W and immediately cause thermal throttling from hell. Even a nice 360mm AIO cooler cannot deal with this kind of heat.

After setting 253W power limits and improving the cooling setup a bit, this was the result:

hwinfo_sensors_3.png


No thermal throttling anymore, but still too high temperatures, there should be some headroom for higher ambient temperatures. If the CPU temperature is mid-80°C, perfect. Above 90°C, you should reduce the power limits, below 80°C you can raise them if you want, of course it also depends on the noise you want to tolerate, that has to do with the fan curves. It's certainly worth checking if the fan curves are set properly (low fan speeds in idle, slowly ramping up with higher temperatures, full speed at around 90°C). I would try to stay away from the 90°C range CPU temperatures under full load, because as mentioned, that slowly enters thermal throttling territory. It is not good to rely on that, and when it's hot in the summer and the cooler has to work with warmer ambient air, it can more easily run into thermal throttling. So there needs to be some thermal headroom to account for that.

With a lot of CPU models, not much performance will be lost from setting power limits (unless they are very low). That is because above a certain power draw, the performance increase will be in the low- to mid-single-digits, while power draw will rise pretty much exponentially. So these last performance gains are to be dismissed anyway, they are highly ineffective "junk performance". You are improving the calculation efficiency by limiting the power draw a bit, because there will be less energy spent for the job to finish.

Furthermore, under gaming for example, the CPU is only at partial load, or full load only on a couple cores (usually games are happy with about six cores), so the CPU power draw will be well below the power limits. They only come into effect on fully multithreaded load like encoding, rendering and such, and there they prevent the temperatures from getting out of hand.

How to set power limits? You go here in the BIOS and enter a number in Watts for the Long and Short Duration Power Limit:

MSI_SnapShot_14.png


So in the BIOS, first press F7 to switch to Advanced View, then go to "OC", then to "Advanced CPU Configuration". Set the values there (just select the Long Duration Power Limit and type in the number in Watts you want the limit to be, repeat for the Short Duration one). Then check in Windows if the temperatures under full load are ok. If not, lower the values until you stay away from the >90°C range. Then the cooling is protected and there is no dependence on thermal throttling.

If there is some seemingly random thermal throttling being registered by HWinfo, despite the temperatures not even getting into the 90°C range, it can potentially due to momentary single-core-boosting with CPU models that have this feature. In this case, there will be a BIOS setting on this same page, called "Intel Turbo Boost Max Technology 3.0", which you can try disabling. Yes, for single-threaded loads you may lose a very tiny bit of performance, but it's better to have the CPU running more safely. The days people could run an i9 completely unlimited are pretty much over. Today it's about managing the CPU and preserving its useful life.

A word about another limit, the "CPU Current Limit (A)" in the BIOS screenshot, aka "IccMax": This is somewhat related to the power limits, it limits the internal CPU current in Amperes. In light of the recent instability issues with 13th- and 14-gen CPU models, Intel recommended certain values there for different CPUs (latest Intel recommendations).

This Current limit can be additionally set, it can give a bit of extra security, for example 307A as a precaution (with power limits up to the lower 200W range), and when going up to power limits of 253W (the maximum i'd recommend), with good cooling on an i9 CPU, then you may also set up to 400A (but never higher). Once the power limits are set to the CPU cooling capabilities of the individual system - which most of the time means probably somewhere between 150-250W, depending on the cooler and the airflow in the case - then this current limit might not even come into action, because the power limits would act before the current limit can act.

Note that Intel also recommend certain power limits for different CPU models, but those are more or less arbitrary, they have nothing to do with your individual cooling capabilities. One thing i would say, there is no benefit in allowing more than ~250W for any CPU, not even a 14900KS. Because it will always make the CPU run more inefficiently from that point onwards (at the very latest, for other CPU models even earlier). That's then "junk power draw" or "junk performance", meaning the power draw still keeps increasing a lot, but only for minimal performance gains, it basically just ruins the efficiency. So even with a high-end 360mm AIO, you will not tend to see me recommending limits higher than 253W.

If short-term performance is of high importance, one could experiment with different values for the Short and Long Duration power limits. For example, set 220W Short, then 200W Long, if the cooling is good for a bit over 200W of heat. This way, thermal throttling with continuous full load could be avoided, while still allowing slightly higher power draw for the first minute of full load. But at such high limit, it doesn't make a big difference anymore, certainly not for games or any mid-load workloads, it would have to be full load on most or all cores.

With the power limits taken care of, we come to the next important step:


2) Lowering the "CPU Lite Load" mode, for lower voltages. That's a setting that has to be found out for each specific CPU by doing stability testing. By lowering it, you essentially shave off the generic headroom that MSI like to add on VCore (CPU core voltage), and adapt it to your specific CPU sample. This is a good way to lower power consumption in all load states. I have been recommending it for ages, and it has been proven to be highly efficient hundreds of times by now.

This is an example of CPU Lite Load on Auto setting (resulting in Mode 9 there, the grey value is the currently active one):

CPU Lite Load.png


It's on the same BIOS page as the power limits.

Short guide: Just manually set a lower mode for CPU Lite Load. Your only limit for lowering it would be the point where the CPU becomes unstable (because the voltage becomes too low). Once you see instability in any CPU stress testing tool (i list a few further down below), or even in normal workloads like Cinebench already, then back off one step and test the next higher mode (so for example Mode 3 -> 4). Once you find the lowest stable mode (say if Mode 4 is stable), i recommend to actually set it one mode higher than that (Mode 5 in this example), to have stability headroom and not be on the edge of stability. If you see a big performance decrease from lowering the mode by a bunch of steps, then you need to disable the option "IA CEP Support" (it's on the same BIOS page as all the other options mentioned here). Done.

There's no need to change the power limits from what you determined before either, because those limits only have to do with your cooling capabilities, these don't change once you determined what your cooling can handle. But now, when you make the CPU draw a bit less power, it will also have to throttle less under full load (if the CPU model natively wants to draw more power than where you set the limits at), and it can thus boost the clocks a bit higher. This is the beauty of optimizing CPU Lite Load: When done correctly, it will not lower performance, it will actually increase it. Because within the power limits you set, when there's less voltage used for a given frequency, it can then boost higher than before. But it all has to be tested for stability.

Check the performance too:
Now, an important step for this is to first confirm that the performance remains roughly the same as before. Because on that "Advanced CPU Configuration" page in the BIOS, there can be a setting called "IA CEP Support", which is the "Current Excursion Protection" for the IA cores (= normal CPU cores). It wants to prevent any undercurrent or overcurrent from a narrow window that is expected for a CPU. Once it sees a break from the norm, it will work against it by also lowering performance a lot. With an active "IA CEP", when using a lower "CPU Lite Load" mode, the performance can massively decrease, depending on the configuration, similar to here. "IA CEP" then has to be disabled for the performance to get back to normal.

Why do i mention this "IA CEP" setting?
Because this is ideally checked before/during fine-tuning the CPU Lite Load mode. IA CEP on [Enabled] would not allow any instability, no matter how much you lower "CPU Lite Load", since it would also slow down the CPU to a crawl. So in the end, it's impossible to test for stability when it cannot become unstable (because IA CEP also lowers CPU performance accordingly). So if there is a huge performance loss when lowering CPU Lite Load, for example a much lower Cinebench score all of a sudden, then you have to first disable "IA CEP" to remove this overprotective mechanism and actually shave off the VCore you want while maintaining stability.

Is it safe to disable "IA CEP"?
Yes, because it is needlessly fighting the outcome of undervolting. By lowering the voltage, you are trying to do the best thing you can do to the way a CPU operates (as long as it stays stable), and IA CEP is working against it because it detects a deviation from a narrow "normal" range it tries to uphold. But we are know that lowering the voltage is not dangerous (quite the opposite), so we should not let IA CEP interfere in this instance. Furthermore, using an updated BIOS with the fixed Intel microcode will prevent the voltage spikes that can cause CPU degradation, so that's already the main line of defense. The recommendation to keep IA CEP enabled comes from a time way before BIOS updates with this new microcode were available, plus it was meant for default BIOS settings, not for hand-optimized settings. Here is more circumstantial evidence that disabling IA CEP should not cause the current to go crazy. So when you see the performance going down the drain when lowering "CPU Lite Load" below Mode 10 or so, simply set IA CEP Support to [Disabled], nothing bad will happen.

What to do when the option "IA CEP" is not available?
We know now, if IA CEP is available and you notice a severe performance drop (for example Cinebench score getting lower), then it has to be disabled, simple as that.
But what if IA CEP is not available as an option on your board? Then there's two possibilities, which you can't influence:
1) Performance stays the same when you lower CPU Lite Load (which is what you want, and is the case with my configuration), or:
2) Performance drops off a cliff once you lower CPU Lite Load enough, or otherwise try to lower the core voltage (bad, this would severely limit the undervolting capabilities).
If the option is not available and you notice a performance drop, then you either have to use the lowest CPU Lite Load mode that still keeps the full performance (often around Mode 9), or you have to use a more sophisticated undervolting method that tries to "dance around" IA CEP becoming active, using a combination of different settings. But that is beyond the scope of this guide.


Here is an example of what a user set for their specific configuration in the BIOS:

CPU.png


Now, this is just to illustrate where the settings are, this is not how everyone should set it! Everyone has to set their own values, because each cooling configuration can deal with a different amount of power draw (=heat) from the CPU before it starts getting into trouble. And each individual CPU has a different point at which it becomes unstable if you shave off too much core voltage. So never just apply other people's settings, good values for the power limits and CPU Lite Load always have to be found out through individual testing!

What stress tests are good? I would say, OCCT (up to an hour of CPU test, Linpack test), Prime95 Torture Test (20 minutes or so of Small FFTs), Cinebench R15 Extreme Edition mod (i have verified that this has been properly modded, also see here, and you'd run it at least a handful of times in quick succession), y-cruncher (you can search for guides on it), even running Geekbench a couple times in a row.

Conclusion about "CPU Lite Load": In my opinion, it is perhaps the best undervolting method on Intel MSI boards, because it's one of the easiest, it bundles everything in one simple setting. Stability has to be verified though, any undervolting can eventually lead to instability. Each step brings down VCore (the core voltage) for all load states a bit. Then the CPU can clock higher at the same power draw, making the performance with full load (at the power limit) improve, and of course it will also save power in all load states below the power limit. Limiting the power draw and reducing the voltages is a smart idea in general, but especially so when elevated voltages seem to be able to deteriorate 13th and 14th gen within a short time span sometimes.

Congratulations! You should now have a CPU that is running much more efficiently and won't overpower your cooling!


One final remark about taking over settings from other users that have the same CPU model as yours: This would only work if all CPUs of the same model also behave identically. But that is not the case, far from it. Within a CPU model, each individual CPU requires a different voltage for stability (lower-quality CPUs need a higher voltage and vice versa). This is basically the "silicon lottery". Here is a video showing the differences between CPUs of the same model (taking AMD as an example, but it's similar with Intel):


So, each CPU is completely individual. You can have one CPU that runs perfectly stable with CPU Lite Load mode 3, and the next one of the very same model needs mode 6 for stability. This is a difference in the silicon quality, the voltage it needs for stability. There can easily be a 100-200 mV difference (of voltage that is necessary to reach the highest boost frequency) between the highest- and lowest-quality samples of each CPU model. In the BIOS, they have to account for the lowest-quality CPUs (those that need the highest voltage). That's why, if your specific CPU is of higher quality than that (which usually is the case), you can immediately improve how it behaves when you lower CPU Lite Load down to its actual requirements.

CPU Lite Load is a sort of "additional CPU voltage" (additional VCore) from MSI, which aims to make all CPUs of varying silicon quality run stable. They have tested many different CPUs and determined a setting that will ensure stability, even if your individual CPU doesn't have a good quality and needs a higher VCore than other CPUs of the same model. Now, if you lower CPU Lite Load (while ensuring stability), you are fine-tuning it down to the exact VCore mapping that is sufficient for your specific CPU. You are taking off some of the additional VCore that MSI normally adds, because a lot of CPUs are still running 100% stable with less additional VCore than the high average value that MSI has determined.

But it also means, each CPU has to be tested individually. Just applying someone else's CPU Lite Load mode, because they happen to have the same CPU model, will rarely fit for your CPU. Either it becomes unstable because your CPU has a bit lower quality than that and needs a bit higher voltage, or you would have the potential to lower the mode more because your CPU has a bit higher quality. So better determine a good mode through your own testing (same goes for the power limits and such).


What about "Core / Core Ultra", like the Core Ultra 9 285K?

For the Z890 boards with Core Ultra, the BIOS looks a bit different, but it seems to have pretty much the same options at least, and i would assume CPU Lite Load works in a similar manner. However, due to the many architectural changes in Core Ultra, i cannot promise the same results, especially since the power draw reading in HWinfo (CPU Package Power) can be inaccurate due to the way Core Ultra is designed. It can be "calculated wrongly" depending on some other settings. So for now, i can only guarantee proper results up to 14th gen. Personally, i've used this CPU Lite Load setting all the way back from my old 9600K, generations in between, and up to my current 13th gen. Always the same procedure to optimize it.

However, MSI themselves are now saying how useful this setting can be, here's an example from their new Z890 boards:

Z890 Lite Load.png


So apparently, it's "all systems go" on Z890 and Core Ultra as well. I just haven't seen much about it yet, the Core Ultra CPUs don't seem that attractive at the moment.


My other guides:
RAM explained: Why two modules are better than four / single- vs. dual-rank / stability testing
Guide: How to set up a fan curve in the BIOS
Guide: How to find a good PSU


The following is for geeks only, others can stop reading :)


Addressing two minor criticisms of CPU Lite Load "Normal": Some people have pointed out before that this method of lowering CPU Lite Load "Normal" mode is not perfect in every way. This is not entirely false, but let me explain why i still think it's the best and easiest way.

The first criticism of tuning the CPU Lite Load "Normal" mode is that it picks its own value combination for AC Loadline and DC Loadline. AC Loadline is what actually influences the voltage, it's a voltage added by the BIOS to make up for electrical properties of the CPU socket and so on. The background is not so important to understand, the main thing is, the higher this value is, the more voltage is added. This not only takes into account the electrical properties of the board and the CPU socket, it also can make really bad CPU samples (when you lost the silicon lottery) run stable when set appropriately by default, or it can make CPUs be unstable from factory, if set too low by default. Lastly, if set too high by default, it will make the CPUs draw too much power and run too hot. The board makers have been going through various possibilities; Gigabyte at one time set the AC/DC Loadline way too high (equivalent to a high "CPU Lite Load" default mode on MSI), and even on MSI i recently saw one BIOS set Mode 22 which is among the highest possible, quite crazy. So they might have been trying to solve instability by adding more voltage, even though Intel now found that excessive voltage is what is causing problems.

For the DC Loadline, "CPU Lite Load" on Normal (just changing the mode) will pick some value which might not result in the correct power draw readings anymore. Apart from this one detail, the wrong value is not of much consequence. But if the cooling is such that power limits had to be set to prevent thermal throttling, then incorrect power draw readings will mess with the power limit throttling, it might set in too early or too late. That's where CPU Lite Load "Advanced" would come in.

In CPU Lite Load Advanced, you can select values for AC and DC Loadline seperately, without having some preset combination which can have the wrong DC Loadline value. So now you can set the DC Loadline so it results in the correct power draw numbers. Doing that involves using HWinfo Sensors, creating full CPU load, then looking at the CPU's VID requests (in the "current values" column), which is the voltage the CPU asks for from the board, and comparing it to the current VCore value (note that i don't mean current as in Amperes, i mean current as in, actual live values, not Min/Max/Avg). If those are near-identical, the correct DC Loadline value has been found. The correct DC Loadline value depends on the LLC mode, another setting which influences the voltage (and not to be confused with CPU Lite Load / CLL, completely different). A table of the AC/DC loadline values is here, but it's only a rough one, because each board model is built differently and would also need a bit different values, presumably.

But even if the reported power draw (CPU Package Power in HWinfo) is reported slightly wrong with CPU Lite Load "Normal", this doesn't affect us much, we can just go by the maximum CPU temperature to inform us if our power limits are properly dialed in, or if we still need to adjust them according to our cooling. Plus, explaining CPU Lite Load "Advanced" makes it more complicated, which means less people will do it. So i think CPU Lite Load "Normal" is a good compromise. More on this in my thread Explained: How the new BIOS versions are causing higher temperatures.

The second criticism: It has been said that CPU Lite Load sometimes cannot be lowered as much when you don't also tweak the LLC mode (CPU Load Line Calibration Control). That's because, when keeping LLC mode on Auto, it results in a big VDroop (VCore reduction under high CPU load, to prevent an overshoot when the high CPU load suddenly stops and the voltage regulator has trouble reacting fast enough, causing a voltage overshoot if VDroop was not applied). So with CPU Lite Load, when lowering the mode there, the VDroop also has to be taken into account. Let's say we have to stay at CPU Lite Load "Normal" Mode 5, because otherwise, together with the big VDroop, the voltage under load wouldn't be enough for stability. But when we then look at low- to mid-load scenarios, VCore might be slightly higher than necessary for stability, whereas without such big of a VDroop, it might've been stable on Mode 2 or so. So what has then been suggested is to also set the LLC to something more aggressive (starting from LLC Mode 8 and going up towards Mode 1, it gets more and more aggressive in preventing VDroop, but Mode 1 is far too aggressive, usually you'd never go beyond Mode 4 or 3).

What happens with tweaked LLC mode instead of Auto? Now the VDroop is (much) less, so under full load, the voltage drops less. And now in turn, CPU Lite Load (either Normal or Advanced) can be lowered further than with LLC on Auto, because since the VDroop is less (prevented more), a lower CPU Lite Load settings may result in the same voltage than before (with a higher CPU Lite Load mode and LLC on Auto). With the added benefit that, supposedly, low- to mid-load scenarios of CPU workload now also have lower voltages than before.

However, this last step doesn't quite pan out in my own recent testing on a PC i'm building for someone. Because even if i set CPU Lite Load "Advanced" AC Loadline to 1 (the lowest possible value) and select a mild LLC setting like Mode 7 (where the VDroop is still relatively big), i can't get anywhere near the low voltages and low power draw under full load that i can reach with just a lowered CPU Lite Load mode and keeping LLC on Auto. I'm talking a coupled dozen Watts difference here under full load, measured at the wall. In other words, lowered CPU Lite Load with LLC on Auto results in the lowest possible VCore and power draw under full load (while staying stable) in my testing, which is arguable one of the most important scenarios for which to keep the power draw low (to avoid cooling problems and improve the CPU's efficiency).
 
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Will it be visible enough to justify the change though?
I recall people joking how messing with ram will only increase the FPS by a digit,

Cinebench for example, it won't care, it purely tests the CPU, without much RAM transfers at all. But anywhere with more RAM transfers, it will benefit from higher DDR speeds and tighter timings. For example file compression/decompression and such. For games, it depends on the individual game. Some games don't care too much, others like Borderlands 3 are quite happy about higher RAM performance.

For you to notice something in daily use, the general consensus is that we only start to notice improvements with the naked eye once they result in a 20-30% performance boost. This big leap won't happen just from increasing the RAM performance. But for certain workloads, for example if you're doing video editing, and notice that some step now takes ten seconds instead of twelve seconds, then you could notice it. Also, it's pretty wasteful to get DDR5-6600 RAM and then be ok with it running at DDR5-4800 and loose timings.
 
Cinebench for example, it won't care, it purely tests the CPU, without much RAM transfers at all. But anywhere with more RAM transfers, it will benefit from higher DDR speeds and tighter timings. For example file compression/decompression and such. For games, it depends on the individual game. Some games don't care too much, others like Borderlands 3 are quite happy about higher RAM performance.

For you to notice something in daily use, the general consensus is that we only start to notice improvements with the naked eye once they result in a 20-30% performance boost. This big leap won't happen just from increasing the RAM performance. But for certain workloads, for example if you're doing video editing, and notice that some step now takes ten seconds instead of twelve seconds, then you could notice it. Also, it's pretty wasteful to get DDR5-6600 RAM and then be ok with it running at DDR5-4800 and loose timings.

Alright I will go back to that later after I'll finish with the CPU and let you know,
For the most part what I mainly want to know:
Does it kill the RAM stick faster or as long as it won't go to some really high nums and above them it will be more or less the same with just more actual use of the hardware?



As for the CPU, I've finally started the temp tests (tried the 10 mins tests but stopped them as soon as the temp was red or Throttling was set to Yes),
After many tests where I've started with 220w I've went as down down as 155w,
On 155w it stayed on 80° most of the time and moved to 81° near the end,
I didn't try 160W or something between 155w to 160w, but these results are kinda close to the 179w relam so I wonder: should I raise it a bit more?

Also I've had one time after moving the W down to 155 and doing the first test for it that the Throttling was set to yes even when the temps were still at the end of 70° to the start of 80°,
I've seen in the guide that if that's the case I should turn off the Intel Turbo Boost Max Technology 3.0 feature?


2024-11-24 .png


One last thing before that, I've peeked on the fan speed guide you made, and I have the feeling that even if I'll give it a full read I will get lost on some aspect, nor do I really want to open my case to test the wind with my fingers.

Till today I've just used the default setting for the very same case (Got it since 2017) so how much bad it's to keep them at default?
And if you think improvement is needed is there any sum up to that guide too that tell me what to do in general?


Mean while I'll keep these W settings till your reply, hope the CPU won't fall on me till I've finish setting it~
 
Does it kill the RAM stick faster or as long as it won't go to some really high nums and above them it will be more or less the same with just more actual use of the hardware?

It will last just as long, but you get more performance out of it. RAM, as long as you don't completely overdo it with the voltage, is among the longest-lasting components in a PC. It will last so long that you could still use it when the PC is long outdated.

After many tests where I've started with 220w I've went as down down as 155w,
On 155w it stayed on 80° most of the time and moved to 81° near the end,

When i said 80°s range, i didn't mean 80°C on the dot, i meant more or less the entire 80°C range. Once you can keep it from climbing above 90°C, you have enough headroom for higher ambient temperatures. If you have air conditioning and you know the ambient temperatures will not change too much, then you can even set the power limits to keep it around 90°C with Cinebench.

With 80°C you would be very conservative. Nothing wrong with that, but you can allow a bit more. Or maybe you want to add a second fan first, then you can definitely set higher limits.

Also I've had one time after moving the W down to 155 and doing the first test for it that the Throttling was set to yes even when the temps were still at the end of 70° to the start of 80°,
I've seen in the guide that if that's the case I should turn off the Intel Turbo Boost Max Technology 3.0 feature?

One core probably had a very short "temperature glitch" where it triggered the thermal throttling bit, you can see this sometimes. The most important is to keep the general CPU temperatures controlled, ideally below 90°C. This intermittent "glitching" is much less worrysome than letting the CPU hit close to 100°C overall, which is often the case when the power limits are maxed out and someone uses a power-hungry CPU. Your overall CPU temperatures are very safe like you have them now, even to the point of being able to use a bit higher limits.

One last thing before that, I've peeked on the fan speed guide you made, and I have the feeling that even if I'll give it a full read I will get lost on some aspect, nor do I really want to open my case to test the wind with my fingers.

Till today I've just used the default setting for the very same case (Got it since 2017) so how much bad it's to keep them at default?
And if you think improvement is needed is there any sum up to that guide too that tell me what to do in general?

Show me how it is with for example 175W power limits after a CB run, but also with the HWinfo sensors window maximized and expanded to three columns. The CB score is good to know too, but just post it as text, seeing all the sensors is more important. I will check what idle speeds and what full load speeds your fans are having, as well as the temperatures etc.

For the CPU fan, you can use the curve from my fan curves guide:

MSI_SnapShot_21 Fan1.png


That is the one for the Noctua fan in the middle of the cooler. Another example, same fan, slightly more aggressive curve:

BIOS_Fan1.png


But since i have a frugal CPU combined with a powerful cooler, i found that the curve from the first picture is more than enough. Under full load, the CP doesn't even reach 60°C, so the cooler stays very quiet even under load. That's the beauty of the combination i use: Relatively low CPU power draw with my tuning of CPU Lite Load (100-110W CPU Package Power in Cinebench), cooler that is good for >200W (at least with the two fans). It's a walk in the park for this cooler.

For your case fans, we need to check what kind of RPMs they are at with different CPU temperatures.

By the way, on your screenshot i see that your DDR5-6600 is running at DDR5-4000, not -4800. It says 2000 MHz, x2 for Double Data Rate, makes 4000 MT/s aka DDR5-4000, with loose timings. This is a true bottleneck for overall performance (not Cinebench, that's purely CPU, but anything that relies more on RAM transfers). But you can get to that once you're done with all things regarding the CPU.
 
It will last just as long, but you get more performance out of it. RAM, as long as you don't completely overdo it with the voltage, is among the longest-lasting components in a PC. It will last so long that you could still use it when the PC is long outdated.
By the way, on your screenshot i see that your DDR5-6600 is running at DDR5-4000, not -4800. It says 2000 MHz, x2 for Double Data Rate, makes 4000 MT/s aka DDR5-4000, with loose timings. This is a true bottleneck for overall performance (not Cinebench, that's purely CPU, but anything that relies more on RAM transfers). But you can get to that once you're done with all things regarding the CPU.
Alright so as long as it not kill them enough so they could stay for at least a decade or so I won't mind,
The default setting on their site showed 4800 so I've assumed that was what they were,

DDR5 was SUPER unstable at the time I've built my PC so I didn't want to take any chances even with an MSI mobo that was said to be good and just kept the settings as default,
I can't tell how much stable it's even today so I've kinda tried to stay away from all of that in general as long as things work,
And it def was faster than my old decade PC RAMs even by default xD

When i said 80°s range, i didn't mean 80°C on the dot, i meant more or less the entire 80°C range. Once you can keep it from climbing above 90°C, you have enough headroom for higher ambient temperatures. If you have air conditioning and you know the ambient temperatures will not change too much, then you can even set the power limits to keep it around 90°C with Cinebench.

With 80°C you would be very conservative. Nothing wrong with that, but you can allow a bit more. Or maybe you want to add a second fan first, then you can definitely set higher limits.

Show me how it is with for example 175W power limits after a CB run, but also with the HWinfo sensors window maximized and expanded to three columns. The CB score is good to know too, but just post it as text, seeing all the sensors is more important. I will check what idle speeds and what full load speeds your fans are having, as well as the temperatures etc.
The envo the PC at could be somewhat hot on summer and there's no air conditioner at that room, there are some fans such as celling fan though, but I had that PC during the entire summer and nothing happened to it as well as with other computers in terms of errors or any obvious overheat, that being said I've never really bothered to keep track of the temps with some tools and only opened them once in a long while to see everything seem to be "cool"

So I may try to rise it a bit but part of me consider keep the W nums as is,

Also 175W was my test before that and even then it rise the temps and triggered the throttling in few mins or just kept rising the nums rather than stay under one C for too long, though not as bad as it was with 220w or 253w ofc,
So I've realized I need to go down a bit more and went down with 20w over 10w for testing, the 155w finally hold 80 to 81C for most of the 10 mins test without moving too much so I've reazlied I was on the right direction,
So I don't think I need to rise it back to 175W (?) or you still need it for the sensors and other info?
My plan was to either try something between 155w to 160 or keep it at 155w by now due to what I've said above, though there's still the matter with the fans RPM to consider

One core probably had a very short "temperature glitch" where it triggered the thermal throttling bit, you can see this sometimes. The most important is to keep the general CPU temperatures controlled, ideally below 90°C. This intermittent "glitching" is much less worrysome than letting the CPU hit close to 100°C overall, which is often the case when the power limits are maxed out and someone uses a power-hungry CPU. Your overall CPU temperatures are very safe like you have them now, even to the point of being able to use a bit higher limits.
So if it's some harmless glitch and as long as the temps are fine I don't need to mess with the Turbo Boost Max Technology 3.0 from what I've got from that?
I don't think I will add another fan anytime soon though (Got 7 with the CPU's included, and 2-3 more from the GPU alone xD)

Which bring me to this section:

For the CPU fan, you can use the curve from my fan curves guide:

MSI_SnapShot_21 Fan1.png


That is the one for the Noctua fan in the middle of the cooler. Another example, same fan, slightly more aggressive curve:

BIOS_Fan1.png


But since i have a frugal CPU combined with a powerful cooler, i found that the curve from the first picture is more than enough. Under full load, the CP doesn't even reach 60°C, so the cooler stays very quiet even under load. That's the beauty of the combination i use: Relatively low CPU power draw with my tuning of CPU Lite Load (100-110W CPU Package Power in Cinebench), cooler that is good for >200W (at least with the two fans). It's a walk in the park for this cooler.

For your case fans, we need to check what kind of RPMs they are at with different CPU temperatures.
Iirc in my old mobo 3 fans with RPM control were the max,
With the MSI mobo think max were 4 (Can't recall and their site not show how much so I need to look for the manual)?

As far as I recall I've set the CPU, Side door fan, and two front fans of the HDDs to be controllable by the case RPM button,
And kept the rear fan and two upper fans as the "stupid" fans with no RPM control,

And despite all of these fans, even with my old mobo, they rarely do too much noise even when I rise the RPM via the button, though think on it again it may not be a good thing but I never seen my deacde old PC, or current one which I've had for a year now, going nuts with the heat

So that make me wonder if I should mess with it at all considering things aren't noisy atm,
I think we ganna need more info about how high the current speed is as you suggested before deciding though, does HWInfo show that too or I will need to use other monitoring app?

Also if I will change at least the CPU fan I should probably go with the second pic then correct?
~~And I can set back to default too from that button there just in case right?~~
 
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DDR5 was SUPER unstable at the time I've built my PC so I didn't want to take any chances even with an MSI mobo that was said to be good and just kept the settings as default,

Yeah well, as we discussed, using four modules will tend to have that effect, especially if you then try to use >DDR5-6000 speeds. But you have to raise the speed somewhat, DDR5-4000 is not really acceptable. If you are too unsure about it, try to sell the two RAM kits you have now, and get one kit of 2x 32 GB DDR5-6000, if you really need 64 GB total.

So I don't think I need to rise it back to 175W (?) or you still need it for the sensors and other info?

I just wanted to see how it's doing around that kind of limit during CB. You are free to use whatever limit you like, of course. It will mostly affect workloads that cause full multithreaded load, so, in daily use, it doesn't restrict much at all. Unless you have some professional use for that much RAM and do long rendering workloads or something i'm not aware of. But that would be even more reason to raise it a bit more than 155W, then you need all the multithreading performance you can get. Obviously in step 2) the performance improves a bit more too.

With the MSI mobo think max were 4 (Can't recall and their site not show how much so I need to look for the manual)?

Here yo go, eight.

Screenshot 2024-11-25 at 02-13-58 MPGZ790EDGEWIFI.pdf.png


As far as I recall I've set the CPU, Side door fan, and two front fans of the HDDs to be controllable by the case RPM button,
And kept the rear fan and two upper fans as the "stupid" fans with no RPM control,

Both are no good. Connect everything to the board. The Noctua fan on CPU_FAN, the others on the rest of the fan headers, write down on paper which fan is on which header. You want the board to have full control via fan curves, so it automatically reacts to a change in CPU temperature (which is always the hottest part in a PC under load, apart from the GPU).

In idle, why would you have a fixed speed for any fan? It just causes more noise and more buildup of dust in the system. Then similarly, at full load, why a fixed RPM, instead, you want them to ramp up so they can get rid of the heat better. And i doubt you will want to switch the RPM everytime the CPU temperature goes up from load, and back down from no load. Using switches on the case, that's a solution from 15 years ago or so, you only use it if there is absolutely no other way to have the board control the fans.

So that make me wonder if I should mess with it at all considering things aren't noisy atm,

To have better cooling performance of course. Like i said, i expected your cooler to be able to deal with close to 200W, even with the single fan, at least get near to that. Turns out your fans are not properly controlled yet, so that would explain why you need to set power limits a couple dozen Watts lower.

I think we ganna need more info about how high the current speed is as you suggested before deciding though, does HWInfo show that too or I will need to use other monitoring app?

HWinfo can only show the fans that are in some way communicating with the board, by sending their RPM speed signal. If you connect them to the case to be able to use that button (quite anachronistic, if not to say obsolete), then neither the board nor HWinfo know what's going on with them, unless the case relays that information to a fan header somehow. Put them all on the board's headers, and you will see them all and be able to control them all.
 
Yeah well, as we discussed, using four modules will tend to have that effect, especially if you then try to use >DDR5-6000 speeds. But you have to raise the speed somewhat, DDR5-4000 is not really acceptable. If you are too unsure about it, try to sell the two RAM kits you have now, and get one kit of 2x 32 GB DDR5-6000, if you really need 64 GB total.
Can't be unsured about something I've never tried xP
I've seen people having stability issue with the Z690 Chipsets of Gigbytes and Asus left and right on the net (had to replace my Gigbytes Z690 chipset too when I've found out about it),
And seen that most reported the Z790 chipset of MSI was the most stable so I've went with that after asking around, and considered I've had 13 Gen CPU it was a better choice.
I never had these issues with that MSI board nor heard people saying they did, but I still didn't want to try my luck and thought the default ram speed was fine,
Keyword is "thought" though cause you just told me it wasn't even at 4800.


I just wanted to see how it's doing around that kind of limit during CB. You are free to use whatever limit you like, of course. It will mostly affect workloads that cause full multithreaded load, so, in daily use, it doesn't restrict much at all. Unless you have some professional use for that much RAM and do long rendering workloads or something i'm not aware of. But that would be even more reason to raise it a bit more than 155W, then you need all the multithreading performance you can get. Obviously in step 2) the performance improves a bit more too.
Aside from opening sh*tload of tabs, or using many apps together, I'm using stuff like 3Ds Max, Blender, PS, etc. to render things aside from games so I don't want the performance to decrease, but as you said lowering the vol and increasing the cooling the right way can keep the old/increase performances at times, so I hope I could make this pie even at the very least.


Here yo go, eight

Both are no good. Connect everything to the board. The Noctua fan on CPU_FAN, the others on the rest of the fan headers, write down on paper which fan is on which header. You want the board to have full control via fan curves, so it automatically reacts to a change in CPU temperature (which is always the hottest part in a PC under load, apart from the GPU).

In idle, why would you have a fixed speed for any fan? It just causes more noise and more buildup of dust in the system. Then similarly, at full load, why a fixed RPM, instead, you want them to ramp up so they can get rid of the heat better. And i doubt you will want to switch the RPM everytime the CPU temperature goes up from load, and back down from no load. Using switches on the case, that's a solution from 15 years ago or so, you only use it if there is absolutely no other way to have the board control the fans.

To have better cooling performance of course. Like i said, i expected your cooler to be able to deal with close to 200W, even with the single fan, at least get near to that. Turns out your fans are not properly controlled yet, so that would explain why you need to set power limits a couple dozen Watts lower.
Let me correct things due to this new discovery (for me at least ahah)
Rear and CPU fans are connected to the mobo, pretty sure the upper two fans are too as well but need to check,
Only 2 front fans of the HDDs and side for fan are connected to that button,

Reason I've said that the rest are "stupid fans" was because I thought that out of the CPU which I knew the mobo could control, half of the ports for these eight fans don't have RPM control,
The reason I've thought like that wasn't just cause I've didn't changed mobo for ten years prior to the last one (I did kept upgrading it by changing other parts though),
But also cause the guy at the store I've went to to built said PC told me that too, maybe I didn't got him right or he didn't read that part in the manual, but I've told him I want only the side door fan and front two fans to be controlled by that button and maybe things got mixed out for me since I wasn't aware all of the mobo fan connections can control the RPM now in most mobos,
(That guy know me btw and let me build the PC with him if I set time beforehand so he also recall that fan rpm button)

My thought line with HDD fans was like "Why should I wait for the fans to move faster to prevent the HDD heat when I can prevent the heat from gathering up in the first place?",
A line of thought that was set for HDDs and fit to a system from decade ago, that being said for the HDDs and side fan I don't really care even if it affect the airflow,
And for GPU and CPU we know their fans change the speed based on the temp so if you're telling me the rear and upper can be messed with too it's good news,

I do need to check if upper ones are connected to the mobo though and dk what speed to set them nor know what the max RPM they support cause they aren't from the same brand, I've changed few fans in this case during this decade and pretty sure I've took the opportunity to change the case ones with better ones from good brands (rear fan brand is also a Noctua fan that should be the same / almost the same as the CPU's Noctua for example)
 
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Alright these were the default settings:
2024-11-25 072923.png

Seems like one of the upper fans either isn't connected to the board or not support RPM changes ???
My guess is that because System Fan 5 port is at the bottom down part of the board, we used something else back then cause the cable was too sort though I will need to check as I'm going to clean dusk from the PC soon enough anyoway,
Also only the CPU fan got Smart Fan Mode On, dk if I want it for the the rear fan (System Fan 1) cause there are some fans I prefer to be dumb and run 24/7 when it come to pumping hot air out of the case unlike with the fans that are attached directly to the hardware.


I've changed the CPU fan settings to be exactly like your second pic and also rise the W to 160W now:
20241125_070746.jpg


But in regard to this
> cause there are some fans I prefer to be dumb and run 24/7 when it come to pumping hot air out of the case unlike with the fans that are attached directly to the hardware.
Idk if I like the fact the fans won't work when temp is less than 30, overall it does make sense just like how GPU fans are like these days, and chances are the CPU will never be below that temp unless turn off (which kinda make it also useless to set),

But I've never liked the idea of fans that turn Off and On too many times in general cause it feel like it will reduce their life span, with stuff like GPUs the fans won't run at all unless it's under meduim to havey load which for most of the times means they're Off for me thx to its heatsinks,

For now I've did it exactly as your pic, but I wonder if I change the 0 to something else later on considering my CPU never was below 30C anyway.


Finally I've did another test with the 160w and new CPU fan settings:

2024-11-25 072320.png

Score is higher and temp rise to 81C and at some point to 86C pretty fast after 2-3 mins, but stayed steady on 86C temp for theb rest of the test,
I think I've found a good sweet spot now and maybe new fan settings also helped with that,
Should I do more tests or I can finally move to part 2 now?
 
Seems like one of the upper fans either isn't connected to the board or not support RPM changes ???

There are no case fans that don't support RPM changes. If they have a 4-pin cable, you use PWM control (DC/voltage control is also possible, just inferior), and fans with a 3-pin cable, you can just let the fan curve change the voltage they are getting, via DC control. They will automatically spin slower with less voltage and vice versa.

Also only the CPU fan got Smart Fan Mode On, dk if I want it for the the rear fan (System Fan 1) cause there are some fans I prefer to be dumb and run 24/7 when it come to pumping hot air out of the case unlike with the fans that are attached directly to the hardware.

Yes, for the case/system fans (at least certain ones), you can use a shallower curve, where the fan curve doesn't ramp up so much for higher CPU temperatures. That way, it can still react to more heat, but not as drastically as the CPU fan. Alternatively, on the top left of the fan control, there is a setting "Temperature Source", which you could set to something other than CPU temperature for a few of the case fans.

Idk if I like the fact the fans won't work when temp is less than 30, overall it does make sense just like how GPU fans are like these days, and chances are the CPU will never be below that temp unless turn off (which kinda make it also useless to set),

You misunderstood the fan curve a bit: When the first point of the curve is set at 30°C, that means, it will use that value for 30°C and anything below. So it won't shut off the fan below. It makes no sense to use 0°C for the first point, because it's physically impossible for the CPU temperature to be at or below room temperature, unless you use liquid nitrogen cooling. So you'd set it at a reasonably low CPU temperature you could see in idle, and for the fan speed, you set the lowest that your fans can reliably turn on with. For the Noctua fans, that's around 400 RPM or so, very low. Some other fans might need a bit more RPM as their minimum, especially when they are DC/Voltage-controlled 3-pin ones.

Score is higher and temp rise to 81C and at some point to 86C pretty fast after 2-3 mins, but stayed steady on 86C temp for theb rest of the test,
I think I've found a good sweet spot now and maybe new fan settings also helped with that,
Should I do more tests or I can finally move to part 2 now?

I still think your fan situation could require some optimization, from what you have told me. It's up to you. In your BIOS and in HWinfo, i can see a grand total of three fans, and the ones on SYS_FAN1 and 6 are not reacting to the CPU temperature. SYS_FAN1 has way too high RPM in idle, but both those case fans are not reacting to the drastic changes in CPU temperature. So those need to go on a fan curve via Smart Fan, and i'd also put some more fans on the board's headers.


fans_.png


As for the CPU fan, you could actually set the rightmost point of the fan curve at 85°C in your situation, then it would spin up a bit more aggressively for that last bit under full load. But the CPU fan would be greatly aided by the case fans also picking up a bit of speed at high CPU temperatures.
 
There are no case fans that don't support RPM changes. If they have a 4-pin cable, you use PWM control (DC/voltage control is also possible, just inferior), and fans with a 3-pin cable, you can just let the fan curve change the voltage they are getting, via DC control. They will automatically spin slower with less voltage and vice versa.
We're talking here about a case that apparently was released at 2011/12
(Setting aside the fact I've got it at around the end of 2016 and stick with it till today),
It came with 4 fans (2 front fans, one big door fan, and rear fan) that out of the four, three of them were connected to that button (front and door fans) xD

Dk if they got any special connector or anything cause I don't recall by now thx to how I've barely messed with them,

I did replaced the rear one manually last year and made sure it was connected to the mobo, but with the other three it's more of a "go figure" situation cause I don't even know what their max rpm is, though they're probably casual fans like any other one (from 2011...)

You misunderstood the fan curve a bit: When the first point of the curve is set at 30°C, that means, it will use that value for 30°C and anything below. So it won't shut off the fan below. It makes no sense to use 0°C for the first point, because it's physically impossible for the CPU temperature to be at or below room temperature, unless you use liquid nitrogen cooling. So you'd set it at a reasonably low CPU temperature you could see in idle, and for the fan speed, you set the lowest that your fans can reliably turn on with. For the Noctua fans, that's around 400 RPM or so, very low. Some other fans might need a bit more RPM as their minimum, especially when they are DC/Voltage-controlled 3-pin ones.
Oh I see, so their default settings which was at 0 is actually the one I would rather avoid.

Yes, for the case/system fans (at least certain ones), you can use a shallower curve, where the fan curve doesn't ramp up so much for higher CPU temperatures. That way, it can still react to more heat, but not as drastically as the CPU fan. Alternatively, on the top left of the fan control, there is a setting "Temperature Source", which you could set to something other than CPU temperature for a few of the case fans.

I still think your fan situation could require some optimization, from what you have told me. It's up to you. In your BIOS and in HWinfo, i can see a grand total of three fans, and the ones on SYS_FAN1 and 6 are not reacting to the CPU temperature. SYS_FAN1 has way too high RPM in idle, but both those case fans are not reacting to the drastic changes in CPU temperature. So those need to go on a fan curve via Smart Fan, and i'd also put some more fans on the board's headers.
Yeah as I've pointed out above, only the rear and one of the two upper fans (not one as you commited) seem to be connected to the mobo aside the CPU's,

I will look where the second one is connected to when I'll open the case to clean dust soon enough, it's kinda hard to tell from looking at the case from the outside,

System 1 is the rear fan, which as I've said I rather it be a stupid fan, but if you think we can make some good curve or use temp source for them instead, as long as it won't lower the RPM that much from how they're now I could try it,
Non of them using smart fan aside the CPU by default.

SyS 6 and 5 are for top fans which out of the two only one is detected by the mobo,

Also I can't add any more fans to the top cause the top only got space for 2 fans max or one these pump fans case or water cooling system, the bottom part of the case have a space for fan system/water cooling too but I don't think it's needed, we talking here about 6 fans without including CPU's and GPU's, which I think is fair regardless if they're at max speed or in between,

And also the CPU cooling is pointed towards the top, not the rear fan which is better afaik,


View attachment 195612

As for the CPU fan, you could actually set the rightmost point of the fan curve at 85°C in your situation, then it would spin up a bit more aggressively for that last bit under full load. But the CPU fan would be greatly aided by the case fans also picking up a bit of speed at high CPU temperatures.
You mean to change to 85C the one that is currently at 90C?

Also what do you think of this heat test so far? it's good enough from your experience?
 
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We're talking here about a case that apparently was released at 2011/12
(Setting aside the fact I've got it at around the end of 2016 and stick with it till today),
It came with 4 fans (2 front fans, one big door fan, and rear fan) that out of the four, three of them were connected to that button (front and door fans) xD

Yeah, that's really old indeed, hard-wired fans. Me, i'd take them out (just cutting the cables if they're hard-wired all the way to the button), and if they're 120mm size, replace them with Arctic P12 PWM PST. Those are good and cheap, bought a couple of those for some systems i built in the past, great price/performance. Also see the review here. Or if they're 140mm (but i doubt it), the Arctic P14 PWM PST, equally good.

If you have case intake and exhaust fans plus the CPU fan working somewhat in harmony with rising CPU temperatures, you will have better cooling potential.

If you look at my fan curves guide again, in there are two pictures roughly showing an example airflow through a case. This works best when the fans can all react to a change of circumstances. There are vastly different cooling requirements for when the CPU is idle and drawing <10W, vs. the CPU at full load and drawing 150-200W depending on your power limits. If you only have the CPU fan reacting to it, but the airflow through the system remains at a constant state, then some of the work of the CPU fan will be for nothing. It pulls and pushes air faster through the fins in the heatsink, but it doesn't get exhausted much faster from that alone.

Of course, the system fans should perhaps not be at 100% speed under full load, you can make the fan curve shallower for them as i said. But you want there to be a good balance, also, no big over- or underpressure inside the case. And generally there is only little airflow required when the PC is idle, i would never have a fan spin at over 1000 RPM in idle, for what is maybe 20W worth of heat being produced inside the case at that point, if that.

You mean to change to 85C the one that is currently at 80C?

Yes, but it's currently at 90°C according to your BIOS photos.

Lastly, since we have turned this thread into your personal Q&A session for the last couple of pages (which is fine by me, and i hope others can also take something away from our discussion), i would be interested in seeing a few photos of the system. With the side panel off, obviously, but since you say there is some side fan, maybe a photo of that panel/door too. Upload to some imagehoster and link here, if they're too big for the forum. That would be appreciated, it would help me understand the situation better.
 
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Yeah, that's really old indeed, hard-wired fans. Me, i'd take them out (just cutting the cables if they're hard-wired all the way to the button), and if they're 120mm size, replace them with Arctic P12 PWM PST. Those are good and cheap, bought a couple of those for some systems i built in the past, great price/performance. Also see the review here. Or if they're 140mm (but i doubt it), the Arctic P14 PWM PST, equally good.
I don't think they're hard wired at least not the big door fan, Corsair made these cases series for gamers in mind so I believe that didn't wanted people to be bonded by their default cooling as everything in this case was made in mind of place fans in many different areas

I think the top fans are from Arctic but one them tend to be randomly noisy lately when I start the PC and stop the noise after few secs/mins so I've considered replacing it with noctua's,
Maybe it make noise cause it's connected to the mobo and is PWM fan, I dk if the other fan is PPM or if it's just connected to the wrong place yet till I'll check,
Also I've checked in the bios and all of the other fans seem to be already set to CPU temp source; these who are being detected that it.

If you have case intake and exhaust fans plus the CPU fan working somewhat in harmony with rising CPU temperatures, you will have better cooling potential.

If you look at my fan curves guide again, in there are two pictures roughly showing an example airflow through a case. This works best when the fans can all react to a change of circumstances. There are vastly different cooling requirements for when the CPU is idle and drawing <10W, vs. the CPU at full load and drawing 150-200W depending on your power limits. If you only have the CPU fan reacting to it, but the airflow through the system remains at a constant state, then some of the work of the CPU fan will be for nothing. It pulls and pushes air faster through the fins in the heatsink, but it doesn't get exhausted much faster from that alone.

Of course, the system fans should perhaps not be at 100% speed under full load, you can make the fan curve shallower for them as i said. But you want there to be a good balance, also, no big over- or underpressure inside the case. And generally there is only little airflow required when the PC is idle, i would never have a fan spin at over 1000 RPM in idle, for what is maybe 20W worth of heat being produced inside the case at that point, if that.
Yeah I'm aware of cases air flow, but since I never OC'd before and always just went with really good cooling from the start I wasn't that bothered by it being basic,
The cooling fan on my CPU is already aimed toward the upper fans so with the rear and upper fans I think it got enough support for the CPU part,
With the GPU however it's another story, but unlike Intel last CPUs my GPU doesn't tend to go *that* high over nothing.

Since I have zero exp at directly controlling fan speed with temp, I don't really got a touch for it yet (definitely not for fans that aren't a CPU fan that supposed to go crazy as things got hot) so I dk what to try without make them extra noisy or too slow by mistake,

Did you used something for your fans or it was an overkill with the I5 that you didn't had to bother? xD
Yes, but it's currently at 90°C according
to your BIOS photos.

Edited it, my mistake
Lastly, since we have turned this thread into your personal Q&A session for the last couple of pages (which is fine by me, and i hope others can also take something away from our discussion), i would be interested in seeing a few photos of the system. With the side panel off, obviously, but since you say there is some side fan, maybe a photo of that panel/door too. Upload to some imagehoster and link here, if they're too big for the forum. That would be appreciated, it would help me understand the situation better.

You can see the case in the video above, their site had a full spec and pics of it till of last year but they changed it to be only one pic and general specs which is a shame

I don't have any pretty photos consider the disk drives which people today consider as harasy xP
Untitled-2.jpg

Also just found a pic I took from the inside of the PC last year before I've changed the rear fan,
Not a pretty pic too cause there are many cables and you can see how many HDDs I've got there aside the Sata SSD and MM2s (Kept all of them as I've upgraded things cause it was a waste to throw away) xD, but even from a vid I took and zoomed in on the mobo in different angels (probably so I know how things were before I've changed the fan) I can't tell to where the second top fan is connected to, not seem to be to System fan 5 though
hfghfghfg.jpg


Also they seem to be Zalmen fans, not Arctic, though I do recall that one of the fomer fans I had there were of Arctic which I've probably replaced (I didn't changed the fans that much over the years but consider I have this case for that long I probably did at least twice).


Also did another test today with the different fan settings
Seems like the temp stayed at 82C so the 85 fan settings didn't had time to shine, also score was lower by 100 but I didn't changed anything so probably was random result due to the envo temp.

2024-11-25 204323.png





Now all that left is to turn Off IA CEP Support and start lowering the CPU Lite Load to something like 9 and doing stress test with R15 while keep lowering the CLL one at a time till I start getting errors and than rise it up by two modes right?
 
The cooling fan on my CPU is already aimed toward the upper fans so with the rear and upper fans I think it got enough support for the CPU part,

Having the Noctua in the alternative orientation, fan pointing upwards, is not the best idea, at least if you also have a rear exhaust fan. See the post here where a user had some of the worst cooling setup i have ever seen, further down here is my reply to that. Personally, i would put it into the conventional orientation. But let's see what else you got, maybe it can be justified in this case (literally).

Since I have zero exp at directly controlling fan speed with temp, I don't really got a touch for it yet (definitely not for fans that aren't a CPU fan that supposed to go crazy as things got hot) so I dk what to try without make them extra noisy or too slow by mistake,

Very simple. You have the four points of the fan curve for each fan. For 30°C CPU temperature (idle), you set them all so they're at a very low speed, just moving a slight bit of air through the system. Mine, i all have them around 400 RPM, but they're good fans. Some other fans might need 500, 600 RPM. But you can easily find a good spot for this. Then you go to the fourth point of the curve, the rightmost one. You set that at the same temperature as the CPU fan, so 85°C for you, but at a lower speed, not the full 100% / 12V (depending if it's a 4-pin fan or 3-pin fan).

The system/case fans, as you said, no need for them to go crazy. So maybe try 70% speed or 8.4V at 85°C for the rightmost point. Finally, the two points in the middle, just have them ramp slightly upwards like you have on the CPU fan, the exact values are not so important, just that the curve looks similar. Done.

Not a pretty pic too cause there are many cables and you can see how many HDDs I've got there aside the Sata SSD and MM2s (Kept all of them as I've upgraded things cause it was a waste to throw away)

They're causing quite the obstacle for airflow though. Compare that to a modern system in a modern case, here's one i recently built for someone.

It has a mesh front, three 140mm fans in the front, an Freezer 36 A-RGB as the CPU cooler, and another 140mm fan in the rear (the three front fans are obviously on a bit lower fan curve than the sole rear one). And that's a GeForce 4070 in there. But you see how clear and unobstructed that airflow is? And there's a lot of room inside the case too, meaning a good volume of air. The smaller the case and the tighter the space inside, the less air volume you have inside, and the faster the temperatures rise and the higher they will become. If you want a cool and quiet case, get a big case with lots of free space, and a nice big cooler. You got some of that, but the case, bit too much stuff in the front perhaps. Even the drive cages, that's also a thing of the past.

Actually, i wrote all that before thinking about that big ol' side panel fan you got there. That might change things quite a bit. Now, your front fans are basically just for cooling the HDDs you got there. So they could always stay at their lowest RPM, those drives don't need that much airflow. So, scratch some of what i said above. I'll leave it here though so you can see my train of thought.

Then the bulk of the air intake could be from that side fan, provided it's not making turbine noises. But it should be able to stay at low RPM due to its size. And then this setup might make a bit more sense indeed. Heck, you could probably remove the rear exhaust fan altogether, go completely side -> top airflow.

Now all that left is to turn Off IA CEP Support and start lowering the CPU Lite Load to something like 9 and doing stress test with R15 while keep lowering the CLL one at a time till I start getting errors and than rise it up by two modes right?

Yes, not just CB R15, also Prime95 and OCCT, just a couple minutes, no need to run everything for ages. At some point, something will throw an error or even a BSOD, then you need to thoroughly test the next step above that, to see if that is 100% stable. If you can confirm that, then i'd raise it by another step for stability headroom.
 
Having the Noctua in the alternative orientation, fan pointing upwards, is not the best idea, at least if you also have a rear exhaust fan. See the post here where a user had some of the worst cooling setup i have ever seen, further down here is my reply to that. Personally, i would put it into the conventional orientation. But let's see what else you got, maybe it can be justified in this case (literally).
I was said to have no choice in this matter actually,
I should probably elaborate more to not make my past self sound like some show-off and big-fat-liar (lol)
When I'm saying I've "built" the pc it's usually just a manner of speech where I mean "I've went to somewhere to build the pc",

In my case specifically I do more or less know how to build pcs and did replaced parts manually many times, but dealing with Mobo, CPU fan, and PSU, are stuff I let experts handle since I'm too afraid to break anything or mess with the cable management (which as you seen in my case I have quite a lot) but I can at least connect the mobo's cables since they got manuals and all, combine it with the fact I'm not following up any new trends or news about hardwares and you will get why I still thought most of the slots in the mobo not allow us to control fans RPMs,

So to sum it up: replacing GPU? np, HDD/SDD? Alrighty, RAM? piece of cake, change mobo/CPU/PSU hell no xD

Anyway when I've went to that guy on the store to build the PC (which I know for awhile and he let me be there and build it with him) he said that the manual showed that for that Intel CPU socket we must set the fan like that (can't recall which one but I assume it was Noctua's) so he went by the manual and his experience at building PCs (along with my absurd requests) to make that decision.

If that true, as long as it's just their recommendation, it mean I can't really place it in the other position.

Very simple. You have the four points of the fan curve for each fan. For 30°C CPU temperature (idle), you set them all so they're at a very low speed, just moving a slight bit of air through the system. Mine, i all have them around 400 RPM, but they're good fans. Some other fans might need 500, 600 RPM. But you can easily find a good spot for this. Then you go to the fourth point of the curve, the rightmost one. You set that at the same temperature as the CPU fan, so 85°C for you, but at a lower speed, not the full 100% / 12V (depending if it's a 4-pin fan or 3-pin fan).

The system/case fans, as you said, no need for them to go crazy. So maybe try 70% speed or 8.4V at 85°C for the rightmost point. Finally, the two points in the middle, just have them ramp slightly upwards like you have on the CPU fan, the exact values are not so important, just that the curve looks similar. Done.
I see, I should probably mess with that after checking why that second fan isn't show up there, might even be a good time to replace both of them,
It probably be better than set just one of them to move different right?

They're causing quite the obstacle for airflow though. Compare that to a modern system in a modern case, here's one i recently built for someone.

It has a mesh front, three 140mm fans in the front, an Freezer 36 A-RGB as the CPU cooler, and another 140mm fan in the rear (the three front fans are obviously on a bit lower fan curve than the sole rear one). And that's a GeForce 4070 in there. But you see how clear and unobstructed that airflow is? And there's a lot of room inside the case too, meaning a good volume of air. The smaller the case and the tighter the space inside, the less air volume you have inside, and the faster the temperatures rise and the higher they will become. If you want a cool and quiet case, get a big case with lots of free space, and a nice big cooler. You got some of that, but the case, bit too much stuff in the front perhaps. Even the drive cages, that's also a thing of the past.
You see, the original plan back then was to get a full tower, but I've seen its width won't fit into the area my PC is placed at (that thing in the pic above, my table got one of these designated PC areas),
So I had to go with mid tower, and that case honestly filled up all my needs back then, main reason I've haven't replaced it to this day either (and also since new ones don't get any drive slots these days),

So I can't get anything bigger as this case takes nearly the exact same space that PC stand allows

Actually, i wrote all that before thinking about that big ol' side panel fan you got there. That might change things quite a bit. Now, your front fans are basically just for cooling the HDDs you got there. So they could always stay at their lowest RPM, those drives don't need that much airflow. So, scratch some of what i said above. I'll leave it here though so you can see my train of thought.

Then the bulk of the air intake could be from that side fan, provided it's not making turbine noises. But it should be able to stay at low RPM due to its size. And then this setup might make a bit more sense indeed. Heck, you could probably remove the rear exhaust fan altogether, go completely side -> top airflow.
Good to know that,
Guess that was why the fellow who built it with me didn't complained much about my request to keep the side and front fans still connected to that button, though I recall he also told me something along the lines of the mobo only have limited connectors that can control the RPM, but I think I may mixing things,

I'll consider remove that rear fan, but for now I rather keep it.

Yes, not just CB R15, also Prime95 and OCCT, just a couple minutes, no need to run everything for ages. At some point, something will throw an error or even a BSOD, then you need to thoroughly test the next step above that, to see if that is 100% stable. If you can confirm that, then i'd raise it by another step for stability headroom.
ehhh so I need to use more than one app?
I've wanted to use it in a less messy way and thought r15 was popular enough to focused at, I don't think any youtuber I've seen with the recent intel tests even used Prime95,

Also does each app error is being shown in a way I could know it's one right away?
Cause I rather stop it right away then wait for BSOD once I'll see one,
On that note, how can I know when to stop the test in case no error will show up? cause R15 doesn't let us set any timer.
 
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So to sum it up: replacing GPU? np, HDD/SDD? Alrighty, RAM? piece of cake, change mobo/CPU/PSU hell no xD

With videos such as these, you can learn the rest too:


Anyway when I've went to that guy on the store to build the PC he said that the manual showed that for that Intel CPU socket we must set the fan like that (can't recall which one but I assume it was Noctua's) so he went by the manual and his experience at building PCs (along with my absurd requests) to make that decision.

No, the manual shows it merely an alternative orientation. Here you can see the manual, here is the relevant part:

Screenshot 2024-11-26 194313.png


Most people will use Orientation A. With B, it goes perpendicular to the airflow that's going through the case in most systems. The air would come from the right (front) and wants to go to the left (rear), that's how it is in most systems. With the fan blowing upwards as in B, where does the air come from, the GPU is an obstruction, and the air coming from the front has go "around the corner".

Your case, with the big side panel fan, is perhaps one of the few exceptions where B works somewhat. Inside any other case, whoever installed it like that would've made quite the mistake.

I see, I should probably mess with that after checking why that second fan isn't show up there, might even be a good time to replace both of them,
It probably be better than set just one of them to move different right?

You mean, have them on a different fan curve? Normally you don't need that, if they're the same fan model. Unless you hear some weird noises because they are the exact same RPM, then you can set one of them 1% faster for each point of the fan curve.

Also does each app error is build shown in a way I could know it's one right away?
Cause I rather stop it right away then wait for BSOD,
On that note, how can I know when to stop the test in case no error will show up? cause R15 doesn't let us set any timer.

Prime95 (Torture Test, Small FFTs) and OCCT (CPU test, CPU Linpack test) will immediately abort testing when there's an error, and show you in red color and text that there was. You cannot miss it. CB R15 Extreme mod, it would just crash or show an error message, run it a few times in quick succession as mentioned in the first post. Either way you will notice without fail if there is some error somewhere.
 
I was a big fan of the B orientation (if there is no GPU blocking the intake) but so far I haven't noticed any difference in cooling in my tests. There might be a difference with extremely low speed fans or passive cooling with a heatsink with larger fin spacing. I also thought the heatpipe orientation relative to the intel die might make some difference, but apparently the heatsink coldplate and the cpu ihs make that insignificant

For CB R15 it seems people are suggesting the 15.0.3.7 version might be better at detecting instabilities than the commonly used higher version, also it's good to monitor the WHEA errors displayed in hwinfo64 especially when running cinebench. I also found out in my case running a ffmpeg -c:v libx265 reencode with -preset ultrafast was sometimes better at catching instabilities than p95
 
With videos such as these, you can learn the rest too:

Won't say I'm that unaware of how to build pcs, just that these parts tends to be the hardest to the point I'd rather let someone else handle them.

No, the manual shows it merely an alternative orientation. Here you can see the manual, here is the relevant part:

View attachment 195675

Most people will use Orientation A. With B, it goes perpendicular to the airflow that's going through the case in most systems. The air would come from the right (front) and wants to go to the left (rear), that's how it is in most systems. With the fan blowing upwards as in B, where does the air come from, the GPU is an obstruction, and the air coming from the front has go "around the corner".

Your case, with the big side panel fan, is perhaps one of the few exceptions where B works somewhat. Inside any other case, whoever installed it like that would've made quite the mistake.
Dk, I recall he told me that the way the was socket forced him to put it like that from the maunal, perhaps it was in the MSI manual or just how the socket on the mobo was actually like, it does sound like something that make less sense to me however.

Either way, good thing case work for that.

You mean, have them on a different fan curve? Normally you don't need that, if they're the same fan model. Unless you hear some weird noises because they are the exact same RPM, then you can set one of them 1% faster for each point of the fan curve.
They probably not same model but not sure.
Prime95 (Torture Test, Small FFTs) and OCCT (CPU test, CPU Linpack test) will immediately abort testing when there's an error, and show you in red color and text that there was. You cannot miss it. CB R15 Extreme mod, it would just crash or show an error message, run it a few times in quick succession as mentioned in the first post. Either way you will notice without fail if there is some error somewhere.

Sooooo
I've started doing many tests,
I've turned IA CEP Support Off

And lowered CPU Lite Load to mode 9,
I've kept going down one by one till I've reached to mode 3 with no errors,
On mode 3 specifically, I've tested things with OCCT for 5 mins (all cores),
Tested with Prime95 in the most upper test option (test CPU without maximum power) for 2+ mins,
Did many tests with CR15 Extreme (6 or 7 times?) for all cores
And 10 mins with CR23 for all cores,
No idea if it was enough but no errors,
Only did it for multi cores too, no single core.

I've went down to mode 2, got an error right away that made OCCT close itself, I've run it again and get the error right away.
From there I've started Prime95 on the most upper setting option again (CPU test only, and without maximum power, iirc it called Smallest FFTs)
And the PC froze, after a min I've reset it from the restart button manually (hope it was OK...)

It was strange that I've get an error right away on Mode 2 when on Mode 3 there were no signs of errors at all,
Either way I've moved back to Mode 4 afterwards,
Then did tests of 5 mins with OCCT,
4 mins with Prime95,
Many tests with CB15 Extreme,
Few with the R15 version you linked above,
And 10 mins with CB 23,

No errors and score is at 28241
The score in general went higher each time I've moved the Mode down,

The score at Mode 4 is definitely higher than on Mode 12 from when I did the terminal tests,

The temp was at 83C and at times at 80 to 82C with other tests tools, and no throtteling flags were set to On ofc,

jjghjghj.png


So my question is, is it good enough?
Did I've tested everything right or I had to test it for more mins/hours?

Do I need to mess with anything else for fine tuning things or turn Off the turbo tech 3.0 thingy?

If not we can move to the ram.
 
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For CB R15 it seems people are suggesting the 15.0.3.7 version might be better at detecting instabilities than the commonly used higher version, also it's good to monitor the WHEA errors displayed in hwinfo64 especially when running cinebench. I also found out in my case running a ffmpeg -c:v libx265 reencode with -preset ultrafast was sometimes better at catching instabilities than p95

There is an extreme mod for 15.0.3.7 which i link in the guide, also see here, that is the one to use. Haven't heard of the ffmpeg method yet, sounds interesting.

Dk, I recall he told me that the way the was socket forced him to put it like that from the maunal, perhaps it was in the MSI manual or just how the socket on the mobo was actually like, it does sound like something that make less sense to me however.

Either way, good thing case work for that.

You can orient the mounting brackets how you like, they don't collide with the socket due to the plastic spacers underneath the brackets, so they're slightly above the socket in the end. The VRM heatsinks will usually also respect the area around the socket enough for the brackets to be mounted either way.

It was strange that I've get an error right away on Mode 2 when on Mode 3 there were no signs of errors at all,
Either way I've moved back to Mode 4 afterwards,
Then did tests of 5 mins with OCCT,
4 mins with Prime95,
Many tests with CB15 Extreme,
Few with the R15 version you linked above,
And 10 mins with CB 23,

Yep, all good things. You can now run Prime95 for 20 minutes or so, and OCCT for the full hour, just to be extra sure.

No errors and score is at 28241
The score in general went higher each time I've moved the Mode down,

Yes, that will always happen, performance improves with each step you lower CPU LIte Load. The reason is, since you have set power limits, the CPU has to always observe those limits. When you have a higher power draw for a certain frequency (higher CPU Lite Load mode), the CPU therefore has to lower the frequencies and voltages more to be able to stay within the power limits. But when you have a lower power draw for a certain frequency by lowering the mode, then it's easier to stay within the limits, it doesn't require as severe of a power-limit-throttling. The frequencies and the performance will be higher than before at the same power limits.

Overall, this is a pretty good result if you want to stay conservative about the temperatures under full load. Of course, with any cooling improvements you might implement later, you could look at raising the power limits a bit. I would then also do a bit of stability testing again, just to make sure the higher frequencies it will be able to use then don't introduce any instability. But for now you can keep it like this and move on to the RAM.
 
There is an extreme mod for 15.0.3.7
there is, however that just makes one loop running for a couple of seconds more, but what if the most critical transients happen between loop runs? In such a case you'd want the loop taking as little time as possible and the transitions between loops as often as possible :) I used an auto clicker to trigger the loops
 
It goes back to a comment i found here:

Screenshot 2024-11-27 at 16-33-23 Download Cinebench R15 Extreme Edition - Unofficial MOD for ...png


So apparently, modding the existing CB R15.0.3.7 (which was already unusually sensitive to instability) in this way makes it even more sensitive.
It's not purely about causing transients during drastic load changes between each run.
 
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