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翻訳の問題を報告
Set CPU Core Voltage to 1.350V, if all fails after setting everything below then work your way up to 1.400V, but I don't suggest going above 1.420V personally.
Try setting the 'Max CPU Cache Ratio' to 42
Enable 'Xtreme Tweaking', disable 'CPU SVID Support', and disable 'BCLK Aware Adaptive Voltage'
Set the 'CPU Load-Line Calibration' to Level 6 (Likely in >Extreme Tweaker\External Digi+ Power Control)
Disable 'ASUS MultiCore Enhancement' and set 'AVX Instruction Core Ratio Negative Offset' to 3 (Probably in Extreme Tweaker)
WARNING doing anything below this:
Stops motherboard from throttling CPU but WILL overheat without propper cooling.
Max 'Long Duration Package Power Limit' and 'Short Duration Package Power Limit' by entering '55555' for both, on the Maximus X Hero the cap is '4095' (Likely in >Extreme Tweaker\Internal CPU Power Managment)
Do the same for 'CPU Core/Cache Current Limit Max.', my cap is 255.50
I still doubt this OC settings will work for you since you are using an i7 4790K and I only know 100% that it works for an i7 8700K. The thermal design power for the the 4790K is 88 Watts VS the 8700K being 95 Watts. Plus a lithography of 22 nm instead of 14nm. Intel says the 4790K max turbo frequency is 4.4GHz so I don't think it would easy/possible to get a stable 5.0GHz. Still, if you can more power to you!
Good luck, set fan speeds high and STOP CPU Load if you are going over 95ºC
Are you even properly testing your overclocks? Just booting into Windows, or even playing a game, does not mean it is stable.
Probably not voltage limited. You've probably just ran into a hard frequency limit. Nothing you can really do. Chalk it up to the luck of the silicon lotto.
Why do you want to boot with 5ghz? It will most likely never be stable, considering that voltage does not affect it, so what is the point?
You can try 5ghz on core 0, maybe on core 1 as well, and the rest 4.8ghz or less. If you can get at least one or two cores running higher, it will help with most games, since most games still push the most important calls on the first couple of cores.
5ghz on all cores with the 4790K is winning the silicon lotto jackpot.
The only advice I can give is that you try with only a core or two. Other than that, it more than likely ain't gonna happen.
I was able to get the computer to boot at 5.0 GHz until I typed my password into the lockscreen, it froze, then bluescreened. I kept raising the voltage hoping I can actually get into the desktop but nope. I went to 1.55 volts. Luckily I didn't damage my CPU, seems that my CPU is still performing in the 99 percentile in userbenchmark which is great. I had to grab a huge fan in order to keep my computer from overheating when booting. Kept my temps at 95 idle at 1.45 volts lol.
http://www.userbenchmark.com/UserRun/10625235
Like I said earlier, just use the default volatage and stick to adjusting the clock speed alone by changing the clock multiplier.