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#31
Now to tweak my RAM. Any ideas or suggestions?
Easy explanation is ..............I have seen way too many "answers" in the internet, specially in different Overclockers forums, on what exactly Adaptive, Adaptive + offset does, and how to use it correctly, I gave up looking.
I have my 4.9 set to Adaptive with 1.45 max voltage, and noticed that it only uses the voltage needed(and when using balanced power option, the multiplier changes around too) and have seen my 49x use the 1.45v, but also as little as 1.20v(for a very short moment anyhow, no way I could boot using 1.20v).
Some have said Adaptive is actually for Auto voltage mode, adding a voltage number automatically changes it to Override + offset, which is what it looks like to me
By the way, I tried setting my OC down, getting ready for the summer, when the ambient temperatures will be higher, but it seems my system likes my 4.9 and actually runs cooler with it, than 45x @ 1.20 or 46x & 47x @ 1.35, go figure.
If it likes it, I might have to seriously think of getting an AIO for the CPU, even though it idles at high 20's/low 30's, and goes up to the mid to high 60's under benchmarking load, maybe a single core might spike to 80-82 for a split second(remember under stress test's I down clock so it will be cooler any how).
Adaptive you input the voltage you want without the guesswork of where it should be and acts like offset
Offset - You have to guess where exactly the correct Vcore you need and that takes a lot of time and adjustments some people can't get offset to work because unlike manual voltage sometimes it takes less voltage because of LLC
LLC works better in OFFSET
Manual - Straight voltage no relief of power just full time voltage which many use but overtime depending on the OC and cooling could Degrade
Remember in windows the power settings manipulate the cpu as well Balanced and Performance power do have a lot to do with overclocking remember to change the power profile in windows to make the best out of your OC
By the way this isn't for you Cliffs it's for the OP i just used your answer to explain
Thank you for taking the time to reply.Easy explanation is ..............
Adaptive you input the voltage you want without the guesswork of where it should be and acts like offset
Offset - You have to guess where exactly the correct Vcore you need and that takes a lot of time and adjustments some people can't get offset to work because unlike manual voltage sometimes it takes less voltage because of LLC
LLC works better in OFFSET
Manual - Straight voltage no relief of power just full time voltage which many use but overtime depending on the OC and cooling could Degrade
Remember in windows the power settings manipulate the cpu as well Balanced and Performance power do have a lot to do with overclocking remember to change the power profile in windows to make the best out of your OC
By the way this isn't for you Cliffs it's for the OP i just used your answer to explain
So if I am understanding correctly if my stable OC requires 1.3 volts I can input a lesser value in the adaptive section under 1.3 volts say 1.15 volts (what ever the voltage is for my cpu to run at stock) and use the off set value of 0.15 volts to bring the total OC voltage to 1.3 volts.
Pretty much but trickier than it sounds but you understoodThank you for taking the time to reply.
So if I am understanding correctly if my stable OC requires 1.3 volts I can input a lesser value in the adaptive section under 1.3 volts say 1.15 volts (what ever the voltage is for my cpu to run at stock) and use the off set value of 0.15 volts to bring the total OC voltage to 1.3 volts.