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- #INTEL I7 4790K TURBO BOOST DRIVERS#
- #INTEL I7 4790K TURBO BOOST FULL#
- #INTEL I7 4790K TURBO BOOST SOFTWARE#
With the i7-4790K running 4.0GHz, by default, that may be enough to compensate for the 4 additional threads to run around 1 hr as well. With an i7 running 8 at a time I would only expect them to take an extra 15-20 min at the same clock speed. My i5's, running at 3.5GHz, only take about 1 hour for normal AR MB tasks when running 4 at a time. Your processing times also seem VERY high to me. I went overkill with a Noctua NH-D14 on my gaming machine, but went smaller with a NZXT-Respire T20 on my HTPC.
#INTEL I7 4790K TURBO BOOST FULL#
I know an i7 running HT will run a bit warmer than an i5, but both of my i5-4670K boxes run under 60Â✬ while under full load in an ~80Â✯ room. I use Gigabytes EasyTune app on my GA-Z87X-D3H's to adjust my fan cooling profile settings rather than the Intel tool. I actually wouldn't be surprised if its because I dont have SP1. (onboard video and the 'killer' NIC are disabled).
#INTEL I7 4790K TURBO BOOST DRIVERS#
Yes all of my relevant drivers are installed, and up to date. I suspected the better scores using optimized apps for BOINC which would explain the better performance for BOINC. Running the Intel diagnostics says my cpu is fine "passed". I will do this when my cooling is changed back to liquid. My cpu follows this fine, I can bump up everything to 4.4, but thermal throttling is your overly-attached friend when using the stock cooler in this configuration. The standard speed of the 4790K is 4.4GHz *but* follows this chart: I do have a water cooler, but I had to order the intel bracket, and a couple more fittings. Running BOINC 24x7 gives me about 78-85C on full load in a normal room (non cold environment) on stock cooling. Some chips are better because of the TIM behind the IHS (integrated heat spreader), but its not tied to a specific batch. Thermal throttle is at 100C, but under load 70-80 is about 'normal'. The 4790K runs hot, hotter than expected. I've went into bios and adjusted a handful of settings to a more sane level and disabled the auto-overclock (which the auto-overlick netted only marginal gains at best and lots of thermal throttling). This board by default overvolts and overclocks the CPU right out of the gate where it hits mid 60C while idling. It also has a simple benchmark ability, and that's where I was comparing my setup to other people's setup with the same board & cpu. Grant, the intel tuning utility is a program from intel that allows you to view processor properties, settings & various other bits.
#INTEL I7 4790K TURBO BOOST SOFTWARE#
With MGCJerry's 4790K reporting itself as having Microsoft Windows 7 Ultimate 圆4 Edition, (.00), he does not have the correct software support yet, he needs (.00), that being SP1. The Stock MBv7 app will test all the functions available (that there is support for), then will report the ones it choses, it should be fastest ones available that don't produce errors.įor Windows 7 (and Vista), For AVX to be utilised you need the correct hardware and the correct software support, that being SP1 for Windows 7 and SP2 for Vista, My stock seems worse than "standard" stock.Īre you sure you installed the Chipset drivers from the Intel DVD? Thank god for dual bios).Īny ideas besides overclocking it. Latest BIOS (board says Rev1.1, but bios updater says rev 1.0, and the rev 1.1 bios flash crashes. Also looking at other machines it appears my integer benchmarks are terrible as well.ĭoes anyone have any tips for trying to get this thing running like its supposed to? Seems 1100-1300 is about the norm (for my board & cpu combo. I'm used the Intel Tuning Utility for monitoring the system, and when I use its benchmark, my score is barely past 600. I know the cpu runs hot, and I got it to a temp I'm comfortable with but my performance seems VERY low compared to other machines. I recently sidegraded from a AMD FX to an intel i5 system, then upgraded the cpu to an i7 4790K.