sck451
MOST VALUED CONTRIBUTOR
I've had my PC for a better part of a year now and I've always been a little confused by why the CPU didn't quite behave as marketed: it was stuck pretty constantly at 4.2GHz, without ever boosting up or idling down. Everyone talks about how AMD processors do all these exciting things, and mine just... didn't. Even changing from the stock cooler to the NH-D15S didn't seem to actually change performance.
So I have just spent an hour or two in the BIOS and have finally got things behaving as they should. I think what I have done is to remove an overclock. It seemed that it was set to an automatic core clock multiplier of 42. When I set this to "Auto" instead, suddenly I was boosting up to 4.9GHz and idling down to 3.2GHz. Much more reasonable. Is it normal for a PCS computer to come with this automatic (and seemingly very conservative...) overclock? Is there any other explanation?
By now I'd got the bug and decided that my boring 3200MHz memory could do with some overclocking as well. So I have had a play and got it to 3400MHz, CL16-18-18-36.
I did try setting it to 3600MHz, but that didn't work and I ended up in safe mode in the BIOS (a slightly scary moment).
Now, I was stupid enough not to try a benchmark beforehand, and I can't say I've seen actual functional differences in performance, but it's nice to think I'm actually getting the full performance I'm meant to have now.
So I have just spent an hour or two in the BIOS and have finally got things behaving as they should. I think what I have done is to remove an overclock. It seemed that it was set to an automatic core clock multiplier of 42. When I set this to "Auto" instead, suddenly I was boosting up to 4.9GHz and idling down to 3.2GHz. Much more reasonable. Is it normal for a PCS computer to come with this automatic (and seemingly very conservative...) overclock? Is there any other explanation?
By now I'd got the bug and decided that my boring 3200MHz memory could do with some overclocking as well. So I have had a play and got it to 3400MHz, CL16-18-18-36.
I did try setting it to 3600MHz, but that didn't work and I ended up in safe mode in the BIOS (a slightly scary moment).
Now, I was stupid enough not to try a benchmark beforehand, and I can't say I've seen actual functional differences in performance, but it's nice to think I'm actually getting the full performance I'm meant to have now.