weno no se si llego tarde , no me he leido todo el hilo. Rebuscando en tomshardware encontre que hay que pasar de los strestest tradicionales prime , aida y supongo que occt --- SI LO TIENES EN ADAPTATIVE VOLTAJE SUBE UN MONTON LAS TEMPERATURAS.
Segun parece mandan unas instrucciones avx que suben un egg la temperatura del micro.
La referencia la teneis en los juegos ya que no usan este tipo de instrucciones. Poner un juego exigente digamos un crysis3 o bf4 , a ver cuanto os sube la temperatura. A mi con Natural selection 2, 10 min de juego no pasaba de 45 c. Pasandole el prime llego a 98 grados varios minutos,. Espero que no se halla dañado aunque si le pasas el intel extreme tuning utility no pasa de 74c. El intel stresst test ese tampoco parece malo ya que ninguno lleva las instrucciones esas avx que lleva el prime.
La duda es , los que habeis pasado el prime con 75 c o asi , lo teniasi en adaptative voltaje o en manual? Es que lo pedi a alternate alemania y la verdad que paso de andar con RMAs, mas cuando creo que el micro esta bien.
Le paso el wprime y da valores incluso mejores que en las reviews
aqui otra informacion interesante de linustechtips
Okay if you want adaptive mode (for max power saving/cool temps over offset mode) - in AIDA64 (when you are in adaptive mode) make sure only the stress CPU option should be selected, nothing else. If you stress FPU, Cache, memory or GPU, the FIVR table gets overwritten giving you your high 1.3V
http://linustechtips.com/main/topic/266 ... n-haswell/Segun parece si haces stress a mas cosas que la cpu con adaptative voltaje se soberponen las tablas o eso dicen. Es lo que me paso a mi con el prime en blend , no probe FPU.
Mas sobre lo mismo
NOTE: ONLY stress with adaptive OFF! The reason for this is because while adaptive is all fine and dandy, it can force the motherboard to give the CPU more volts than you set it to under very heavy loads. This primarily happens with synthetic benchmarks. Stressing with adaptive may overwhelm your cooling solution and cause sad things to happen. According to my tests, running adaptive with very heavy real life CPU loads MAY still cause the CPU to get more voltage than you set it to, but the difference is down to say, 0.03v. That isn't too bad but that is still significant, so be aware. Upon "stressing" via my chess program which loads all cores with 100% load, I hit 0.036v above my set limit. Gaming won't really use 100% all core at all times however. Gaming will be absolutely fine. Chess draws 100% from all cores 100% of the time without stop until you make it stop, so in a way it is like a semi-stress test. Encoding videos, for example, will not use 100% all cores or anywhere near that level. I know most people don't make their CPU run chess all night, but it's something to be aware of. On gaming I saw my CPU voltage go an insignificant 0.01 over max, and only for small periods of time.
https://teksyndicate.com/forum/overcloc ... ide/153447Bueno y aqui ya teneis el broche. Espero que os halla sido de utilidad
http://linustechtips.com/main/topic/179 ... m-testing/salu2