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Сообщить о проблеме с переводом
and windows power settings
but windows 10 rarely idles and the cpu may not underclock
else dont worry about it
The most important thing I can get across, is to trust your hardware and your assembly. PCs are really rugged, there's only one thing you can do while building to actually damage it. And that's drop the CPU into it's socket within enough force to break a pin. Since the PC boots you haven't done that. So relax - it's working.
Clock speeds are fine; you can't break a CPU with clock speeds. High clock speeds are a good thing, higher means faster. The only thing you need to watch is Voltage, and that's regulated carefully for you and won't ever put your system at risk.
Although there's no need to do that. At worst you're drawing a few watts of extra power, but even then an i3 uses about as much electricity as a lightbulb.
You're close though :D My second computer with an i3 pulls 35 watts and our LED light bulbs pull 5 watts. :D
My c states are at Auto
Running the default balanced power plan.
Also, does anyone know why cinebench keeps crashing when i try to run a benchmark?
Is your processor overclocked?
yeah. currently at 4.7Ghz @ 1.350 volts. seems to be stable right now but this is thie highest i can get so far. any tips?
It's not stable. Run Realbench or Prime 95 to test stability. All the proper settings are enabled to allow the CPU to downclock, it will do that when there is no work for it to do.
Anything around 1.35 is totally safe. Once you go past 1.4 you're getting into less safe territory. I wouldn't go that far, a safer option would be winding the clocks back slightly for the same voltage.
Bump your CPU down to 4.5Ghz and forget it. Unless you are trying to beat someone's benchmark score that extra 200Mhz will offer you little in the way of real world perfomance. You're just putting your CPU through unnecessary voltage.
> Disable ~ C States, SpeedStep, Turbo; these are power saving features you now dont need or can really use due to being OC'ed; pointless stuff anyways.
> Set Windows Power Profile to High Performance
Having the CPU at max frequency at all times has nothing to do with power draws. CPU Loads are what will draw actual power.