Sorry but you forgot to show us what was an actual performance drop by scrolling to hwinfo cpu tab where it shows frequency and core multiplyers. In my short experience, curve optimizer is already enough to make cpu go faster and cooler due to more thermal headroom. Its basically an undervolt as if its were a gpu.
thanks for the great video..... I've got a 7600x and B650e-f and I recently enabled PBO and set it to 'Enhancement' and then 'Level 2 - 80c' and my PC wouldn't boot/BsoD windows repair. It booted again when I cleared the settings. The only other setting I have changed prior to this is the DDR to 6000mhz in EXPO1, which is stable. Did my PC not boot because I didn't change the 'curve optimizer' as well? I'm a bit nervous to try again as I don't want to corrupt my Win11 Install / Nvme Drive. You mention the 'sweet spot' in the curve, I'm not really sure what that means. What does 30/15 etc relate to? Sorry for the questions, Thank you
This was greatly helpful. Im running a 7700x and a MSI Mobo. I was watching YT videos and my CPU would start ramping up to 67 degrees celsius with my fans ramping up loudly. After doing this im running constantly around 40 C with quiet fans. Much appreciated.
Definitely do this people.. it will drastically reduce fan noise, and also help keep your other components cooler, Definitely worth losing a couple % in performance
@@gontzalcaig That may depend on the "silicon lottery"; exceptional parts could perform better even undervolted, while bad parts could perform worse. But either way it's a good idea. Save power and extend the lifespan of your parts, take the few % hit if necessary.
With my 7600x a negative 30 offset alone brought the cpu temps down 10°C and my cinebench and 3d mark results got better too. The best thing is though that when i open games like Cyberpunk or Metro Exodus now, my fans don't ramp up for a short time as high as before, its really pleasent now. Thanks for making this video!
thank you for mentioning to low the Curve Optimizer at 25,20 and below if we have problem with windows, i actually did at 30,25 and 20, but at 15 everything works fine now
THANK YOU! I usually dont comment alot but my temps went from 95C when trying to run a specific game down to 60C! Anyone with a AMD 7700X consider this before making any hardware changes. I almost bought an AIO cooler thinking that my PC was running too hot!
Yo bro this is what I’m literally going through right now , I stream & play warzone but my cpu hits 95c which makes my whole pc run hot ash & I keep lagging & dropping fps , I know it’s my cpu cuz that the only thang heating up , my gpu stays 65 or less so idk what to do ?
How did you do it brother , I need help , I stream & play warzone but I hit 95 idk if I need a new cpu cooler or just do this but I don’t wanna lose performance
You should also decrease SoC voltage, 1.35V is way too much. Based on my vast experience with a total number of two Ryzen 7xxx CPUs, going as low as 1.15V is pretty much risk free (with EXPO enabled), while reducing uncore power to a significant degree. This way you get lower idle consumption (and temps) and "more power" for CCDs (if TDP is what limits you, which will be the case for all non-X CPUs running more than two-three cores at full load).
I'm thinking of buying the x670e aorus master with 7700x. Is the issue of VSOC voltage resolved with the new bios revisions in Gigabyte? I couldn't find anything on this topic neither on Reddit nor Buildzoid's videos. Thanks in advance for answering.
I have the exact settings from the video copied apart from setting the curve optimiser from 30 to 20 because I think that it is stable. I am running an AMD Ryzen 5 7600x and have lowered the SoC voltage to 1.15v. However, my PC runs fine, it's just once or twice, I do encounter application crashes. I don't know what to change to prevent this? Either increase/decrease my voltage or increase/decrease the curve optimiser? Other than that, I definitely do recommend people to do this as overall temp lower, power consumption lower and in some cases performance increases. This has happened to me in my case with my CPU.
@@isxmiyulll this is how I do it - it might take couple of days, but it's necessary if you want your system stable: 1. BIOS settings to default, restart 2. Upgrade BIOS to latest 3. BIOS settings to default, restart 4. Enable EXPO, boot to windows, run OCCT stress test (1h CPU, 1h RAM), or equivalent. If there are errors, there's problem with RAM modules. 5. Decrease SoC voltage and stress test, until you find stable minimum 6. (optional) Decrease VDD IO and run memory stress test - the difference here isn't huge and some boards (MSI latest bios) don't even allow this, when I forced it via ryzen master, I ran into issues. 7. Increase negative Curve Optimizer value and test for CPU stability. You might want to use varying load at 1-2 cores so they're pushed to the max. Stable minimums will depend on multiple factors, so it's hard to recommend specific values. I don't recommend using "memory context restore", though. It makes boot almost instant, but it might impact stability quite significantly.
Thank you so much! i'm using ryzen 5 7600(non x) and my temp was rising to 75-80 ° during cpu intensive games like cyberpunk and battlefield 2042.after doing this i'm getting 55-60 ° with almost the same performance
It worked very fine! I played around a little bit and set it on PBO 30 with the PPT limit on 100 watts (7700x). Now i got smooth 69C with the AiO (Arctic Freezer 3 - 240) set on 27%. Its so quiet and cool. Lovely! Cinebench R23 score is 19241 (90 watts was 18894 and stock was 19160) Thanks a lot!
With a 7900x my score at first was 25k but the temps where also at 95C the limit. After doing the steps here It went to 24.5k, but the temps dropped dramatically all the way to 55-60C!
@@Daveed2407 I'm planning to do the same for my 7900x, but noticed that hes running a 7700x. Did you ever find the right settings to prevent the blue screen while booting?
Thanks for the video. On looking at the hardware info voltages your soc voltage is 1.35. With the recent reports of burnt cpu's would be better to reduce this down manually to 1.25 or put a newer bios version on to hard lock it at 1.30v. Thanks man.
People should know that anything below 95 degrees *isn't* a problem. It will not harm your CPU's lifespan in any significant capacity. You will replace your CPU when it gets outdated long before it starts to wear out. It's only if you do some serious overclocking or your CPU is constantly thermal throttling that it begins to wear out in any meaningful timeframe. Also note that during a benchmark like Cinebench, your CPU temps will be much higher than in any real world applications such as gaming. The moments where it does heat up are typically so few and short that it's nothing to concern yourself with. What you do get from the lower temps is that your room won't get as hot and your CPU cooler won't be as loud. Lower wattage also means you save some money on electricity. However, it's usually the GPU that's the determining factor here, not a Ryzen CPU. Graphics cards use way more power and generate way more heat these days, your CPU doesn't have that big of an impact.
what is "throttling" exactly? also im using the 7700 and boy this thing loves to go straight to 90 when i do any gaming or downloading at all and i have no idea why, it usually mellows out around 85 after a while but im not sure why it does this
@@The_Panda62 90 is nothing. It's design to run in beast mode every chance it gets. I don't think these CPUs can thermal throttle by design. I did a manual oc and it just shut off when I accidentally let it over heat at 105c. Clocks never throttle, just shut off.
@@The_Panda62 so change your fan curve, also if your gpu is running open air cooling having better case flow could help or setting a custom fan curve on the gpu to help keep temps down a bit. the cpu is not that power hungry to need lots of cooling. its just auto boosting to give the best performance. you could also set the cpu to eco mode and it would reduce temps / fan noise.
@pwningpanda3826 uses fan speed software and adjusts its curve to ur liking. the sudden fan noise is due to ur computer thinking the 70c on ur cpu is bad and it need to run it in high speed fan but in reality 70c to 80c is normal for ryzen 7 when gaming to transferring file to installing game etc etc
Anything below 95 degrees *isn't* a problem. It will not harm your CPU's lifespan in any significant capacity. You will replace your CPU when it gets outdated long before it starts to wear out. It's only if you do some serious overclocking or your CPU is constantly thermal throttling that it begins to wear out in any meaningful timeframe. Also note that during a benchmark like Cinebench, your CPU temps will be much higher than in any real world applications such as gaming. The moments where it does heat up are typically so few and short that it's nothing to concern yourself with. What you do get from the lower temps is that your room won't get as hot and your CPU cooler won't be as loud. Lower wattage also means you save some money on electricity. However, it's usually the GPU that's the determining factor here, not a Ryzen CPU. Graphics cards use way more power and generate way more heat these days, your CPU doesn't have that big of an impact.
@@Forty2de when mining monero what would be the ideal undervolt? i want to get maximum efficiency where i mine with the least amount of power consumption. how do i do that on a gigabyte motherboard? there are no guides on the internet so i dont know how to do this. im new to these things and has zero experience with gigabyte motherboards
Thanks. I built my 7600x new PC yesterday, I was frightened to see that at only 50% load, the temperature instantly went up to 80+° , even with a quite good Assassin 120 SE. resulting in lots of noise from the cpu fan!
U can use fan speed software and adjust ur fan speed to reasonable speed cause ryzen 7 has a normal high temperature, it was meant to be like that but ur pc wont think it normal so u gotta adjust the fan
Please consider making a very detailed video on updating BIOS. This video was awesome, and I know there are loads of people like me who are totally lost when it comes to this. A detailed, step by step video would be extremely helpful! Asus new bios release says something about using bios renamer? I'm already lost there.
Format a flash drive Download your EXACT motherboards BIOS. Make sure it’s also the correct version of the board. Extract the bios download and copy and paste only the main file (about 30mb in size usually) to the formatted flash drive. Plug that flash drive into a USB port and boot into BIOS. Find the BIOS flash option and then select that 30mb file and proceed with update. Make sure to not mess with the pc during update until it states it completed. Usually about 1-3mins to update. Then reboot into BIOS page and check to see if the newer version is installed.
Great stuff! I had issues using Ryzen master but this way seems to be stable so far. Using a 7600X with a noctua nhd15 I'm maxing out at 67°C during a R23 all core test.
Hey everyone , I have watched 50+ videos re arranging bios settings and tried many softwares but nothing worked for the past 3 weeks as i person who has received a new pc i was worried but after wasting my time on all of these videos , I went to my guy who build my pc and he changed the orientation of my cpu cooler fan. My cpu on idle ( 60°C ) and under load ( 100°C ) went to 25°C on idle and 60°C under load . Hope this helped ❤❤❤❤
I'm glad I watched this. I'm selecting components to build a robust mid-range gaming system and was considering AMD for my CPU, currently I'm running an i5-4590 with a Radeon HD 7900 graphics card and the temperature is 31° C... according to Crystal Disk 8. A lot has changed in ten years and the learning curve is steep... but now I have the time to research.
The people that have problems will never tell you, what they are bios setting or how they are cooling the CPU. 1 guy is running ram at 6200 so the soc is running at 1.45 volts all the time on the old Bios. The new bios runs the soc at 1.3 volts at max
I think one can get more optimal results tinning negative voltage by core. -30 on all cores might not work for all. And one should run a battery of tests before assuming a tune is stable. On my 7900X, curve optimizer values vary from 0 to -20 depending on cores. That with eco mode +10% gives me a lot of performance never getting overly hot.
make sure you get a good cooler and update the BIOS as soon as you can. i heard stories of peopIe frying their CPUs, especially the ones with the X3Ds. even my low end 7600 can get quite hot for some strange reason. RAM instability is also a common issue. my motherboard had the old 2022 BIOS. freezing and crashing stopped after i updated BIOS
Just finished my new build with a 7600X and damn does it run hot! It likes to spike a ton and it has plenty of thermal paste. I am seriously about to send this air cooler back and get an AIO to help bring the noise down.
Great stuff, I readjusted with cpu 5800x3D -- temps max is 10 degree lower and 3Dmark rezults for Time Spy -- on cpu 500 score higher ! From 9800 to 10300 ! and temps to be excat from 92 to 82.4
The 7600x are designed to work at 95C and then it throttles its performance according to how good cooling you provide it with. Misunderstood reaction to a non existing problem. You might get some extra performance by a bit undervoltage.
To make sure the curve optimizer won't make the system unstable, i suggest using the auto curve optimizer in ryzen master and put the result in the bios.
@@altiboxtv9570hit delete on startup to enter bios. There should be a fan optimizer option that'll do it for you automatically. Then toggle your curve manually from there if you wish.
i hate how comapnies say “that is normal”. in the car word manufactures will say 1 quart of oil per 1k miles is “normal” just so that they can get away with the flawed design behind low friction piston rings. Then a true solution arises and they try to spin the change in their favor.
Easiest is to bump the amps and wattage in the eco from 65W to 80W, for a total of 105W (vs the stock 105W with a real usage of ~150W). The temp limit sometimes don't work, and still will allow the CPU to do above the set limit.
@altiboxtv9570 try finding a video on UA-cam. Basically you can dial down the system clock 5% or so and drop the voltage on the CPU 5-10%, also the memory voltage a few percent. You dial down and then test for stability, maybe run Cinebench for 10 minutes and see if it's stable. With the clock speed and voltages reduced you may get a 20% decrease in power for a small reduction in clock speed
Curve ball, but that first run, within 5k on cinebench of that w-3265m - 24 cores and hyper threaded, and only 4 ish years old, AMD are absolutely smashing it
It's always better to run @ lower temps if no other reason than to increase component longevity. Another thing you can do is use either AMD's toolkit or maybe your motherboards software ex: (MSI or evga) to under-volt the CPU/APU you can lookup online what safe voltages are & this will also decrease your temps while usually improving your base & boost clock speeds & will also prevent thermal throttling. If your unsure both Gamer's Nexus & Linus Tech Tips have extensive vids oh the how & why this works with both benchmarks & real-world application testing as proof.
i don't know. If it's design to run at 95c 24/7, I don't really care about the temps. I'll use co to get higher clocks but that's about it. Most people like myself will hardly ever full load anyway. It'always in the 50s during my gaming sessions.
@@MrC8025 I think the problem that we've been seeing with "ASUS burning out AMD chips" though is exactly related to this issue. The way AMD designed it is that if it's not going past 95c then we can give it more power, so the chipset itself may be designed to run at 95c however that says nothing about the interface with the LGA and the chipset. But you're right, if you don't use 100% load then the CPU isn't getting that high, and that benchmarking tools like this are designed specifically to run it at 100% load, however there are the case where it may get to full load and if it doesn't get as hot as you want you could get arcing occurring which again fries your chip and MB. If your primary usage is gaming, there's no real negative to just throwing it into eco mode and not have to ever worry about the power issue.
I've never had problems with high CPU temperatures, but I did have an old Dell Latitude laptop that did get very warm, unusually hot, even when only doing basic tasks. I found out it's cpu thermal paste had gotten pretty dry, maybe it needed a thermal repaste. I don't have experience doing that sort of thing though.
I have extensive experience doing that sort of thing having worked in a computer repair shop for 7 years. Avoid it if you don't know what you're doing as you can cause more harm than good.
@@technoWZ5598 Well, usually the whole laptop has to come apart and depending upon the orientation of the board the board may have to come out. From there it's usually about 4 screws that hold in the heatsink. You pop them out and apply a pea sized amount of quality thermal compound and spread it out with a credit card over the surface of the chip then tighten the screws back up. Here's where a lot of people screw up-they apply too much torque on the screws. All that does is cause the sink to bend and squeeze out the paste. Just tighten to slightly over finger tightness in a star pattern and you're done. Eventually your Dell will overheat without fresh thermal compound-at the very least the longevity of the device will be shortened due to the heat and performance affected. Heat creates entropy in the system which results in performance degradation. But Latitudes are old and no longer produced I believe so your best bet is to buy another laptop anyways. Yep.
Guys modern cpus don't work like old ones. They are designed to run like this, when they get close to 95 they cool off by letting you use less power etc. It's fine, so just let them run like they are designed, you're just adding trouble to something thats not an issue.
Putting maximum processor state in windows power plan to 99% instead of 100% will largely reduce termals on CPU, and a bit of performance. r7 7800xd3 went from 84C to 55-65C under load with this simple change. It is also worth mentioning that UE 5 likes to push amd products beyond it's limits, going over 100C on both CPU and GPU. You have to limit it.
Thanks for this video i tried doing a negative 30 on my 7700xand it worked first try. I'm playing bf2042 and in 128 player maps i was getting a temp of 84-85 and now it stays around 70-73. In baldurs gate 3 and cyberpunk I'm seeing about a 15c drop as well. My cinebench 2024 score also went from 1062 to 1104. I'm using a peerless assassin for my cooler.
@@joelkaufmann1601 I just set the curve to negative 30 like he did and that's it. I tried setting it to eco mode but it caused noticable fps drop in bf2042 conquest 128 player
7800x3d... checked my temp while gaming 59C.. and i only have 1 case fan so far because i've been too lazy to put the others in. Cheapest possible air cooler i could find for the CPU btw ( Cooler Master Hyper 212 EVO V2, like 32 euro / 32 usd)
yeah i dun get it, I'm running the same 7700x he is and temps under heavy load push 78-79 degrees C with no knee-capping. I'm running a cheap 360 rad but I guess it's working.
I went from 85 degrees to stable 55 degrees, but there was a dramatic performance reduction. I really don't see how this would be useful at all because you might as well get a less powerful chip instead of just decreasing performance like this.
I did this for my new build, ASUS B650E-F with 7700X, and it ran okay for about a week, then my ASUS B650E-F motherboard starting getting BIOS boot failures (CPU and VGA lights on). Turned the power off and restarted and it passed the BIOS successfully, but then failed the same way on the next reboot. Changed the setting back to the way they were and NO more BIOS problems. No thanks. Funky.
145w to 87w, or 66% more power consumption for only 3,5% more points on cinebench. 100% worth controlling those temperatures. And most likely longer life.
Well I set this to 40 and to my surprise system works fine ran a cinebench23 30 min stress test with a result of 19300approx while on stock it was around 19700 other settings I did was i set the power draw to 115watts and temperature limit to 85. I am running a ML240 cooler from Colermaster , Oh yeah boost clock goes to 5.1ghz and stablizes around 5.06ghz
Same cpu, same settings. In cinebench, cpu never went past 59c. In helldivers 2, cpu went up to 69c. Considering it was going up to 90+, pretty good improvement.
Using Ryzen masters curve optimizer legit lowered my temps by 15 degrees in some all core load situations. It does take about a hour, but it will give you the best undervolt for each core, if you set it to do per core.
Hi, can you explain how to do this? I'm a newbie and couldn't find the option in Ryzen Master to calculate the optimal undervolt parameters. Also, once I have these parameters, where do I need to establish them? In the BIOS? Thank you in advance :)
@@borjairanzo6113 Just switch to simple mode, and select per core, and then click optimize. It'll take a hour or two. But it will offer you some uplift, depends how well you won the silicone lotterly. For me I got a really good undervolt.
Thanx again for your very informative video. May I ask? Does this work for the X570 motherboards also. i am currently using a amd ryzen 9 5950x. Lastly always good to save some on the electricity bills. Thanx.
I always reduce the voltage on my Ryzen processors. It makes little difference in day to day business operations. I do Audio, video editing and I also am a programmer and gamer.
My 7600X is as cool as cucumber. Tested it and it went all core 6ghz. Temps under 70 degrees. Which I wouldn’t want full time. But for 6ghz seems brilliant. Now It reaches 5.8ghz on 2 or 3 cores under load and typically temps are low 60s. I might have just got lucky. Outperforms my old i9 from only 2 years earlier by some margin across the board.
No more screaming fans after making these changes in the bios. With my 7900x I set it to curve 25 since 30 crashed it on boot up. Thermal limit set to 85. Cinebench score is currently 26241 20 pass test multicore.
I have a 7600x that I have the PBO offset set to 80 and the max temp at 80C, it draws 65w usually. Bought it when they were new and have been running it like this for almost a year now.
60.5c max temp. 90.w max 5,126.8 MHz avg And cinebench score of 19264 Awesome guide mate, cheers very much for putting this info up. Did not like seeing those 95c temps
I’m having issues heat issues but with an SFF build. Trying the video settings. It baffles me how high this chip runs. Even with a 240 AIO. Went with a 95 PPT, think I should go higher with a 7800x3d?
You can go even further. Buy Arctic LF III 420mm AiO and lower temps to 65*C full load xD. This cooler cost 88usd in eu right now. (I've made hole to make it "fit" XD).
I have a 7800X3D and a NZXT Kraken 360 Elite aio cooler. Using stock thermal paste that came on the aio, my temps are 40-50 idle, and 45-65 while gaming. Under a hour stress test in OCCT at 100% load, highest temp I saw on the CPU was 78C. Is this considered good?
I have 7600x and now TTP 95w and magnitude 40. Temperature are about 76-77 celsius maxload. Cinebench score rise 14253 ---> 14661. I could tweak settings even lower if i want even more cool running system. My start point was 95 celsius. When im gaming my cpu is like only 55-59 celsius, so its pretty good now.
Could you please help me out if possible how to do that or some advice, ive tried the offset but only managed -10 , anything above that was crashing whenever i oppened a program in the background, do you think its also maybe cuz of the ram im running expo on 6000mhz
@@vaceffl33t85 i dont thing that memory doesn't effect. I found that in gaming i need to use 30 or it crashes eventyally. Did you also lower your power consuption? How big power you have. If you follow video advice it shoulf be working atleast magnitude 20 negative. What motherboard you have?
@@jp4361 I crashed even on -15 cinebench was okay 10mins but later on opening stuff on desktop, im on -10 atm seems stable, my motherboard is b650m ds3h
@@vaceffl33t85 I have gigabyte motherboard so i have Advancet cpu settings, precicion boost overdrive, PBO limit, PPT limit [mw] 90000. That means my cpu maximum power is 90000 mw ---> 90 wats. If you have different motherboard, it can be wats or milliwats. Many of these youtubers but PPT limit to 80wats/80000mw, so cpu is even cooler. Second setting i have now Curve optimizer ---> all cores, All core curve optimizer sign ---> negative, all core curve opzimizer magnitude----> 30. It depens your system and luck how high you can put that magnitude, but its like 10-30. That PPT limit is the main thing that lower your cpu temperature. Try 90w or if you want even lower temperature then 80w.
Similar to my previous AM4 3800X CPU, undervaluing and not using the default offering of the AMD precision boost with very minor tweaks would always result in better FPS due to sustained clocks and lower temps. I find the method of the negative curve and thermal limit on my 7800X3D works very well at keeping temps down while actually maximizing CPU clockss due to lower temps. In you Cinabench test you lost about 500 points for workload but in games you may actually gain FPS due to maintained higher clocks.
@@darkod3380 this is what im running on my R5 7600X Precision Boost Overdrive = Manual PPT Limit 100 CPU Boost Clock Override = Enabled (Positive) Max CPU Boost Clock Override(+) = 50 Platform Thermal Throttle Limit = Manual Platform Thermal Throttle Limit = 90 Curve Optimizer = All Cores All Core Curve Optimizer Sign = Negative All Core Curve Optimizer Magnitude = 20 (Should be as high as possible but 20 is likely fine if you don't want to test it, mine does 26)
Cookbook approach with no explanation of WHY doing these things would help (or why you should apply these limits rather than any other of the vast range of limits available through the BIOS).
The biggest problem is here at 1:36 and here at 9:09 No matter what you do AMD CPUs still use a lot of power when idle. Now think for a second how much time your CPU is on idle (just OS, browser, YT, etc) and how much time it is on 100% workload. The end result may be shocking but overall Intel CPUs are using less power. Yes, they use more under 100% load but instead of 30W-55W on idle Intel CPUs are using 8W-9W.
Let's say your CPU runs 24H with 40w power draw. That's 960w in total but let's round it up to 1kW. That's 30kW for a month. With the world average kW/h price of 0.15$ that's 4.5$ per month. For who exactly is this a "problem"? Even in Ireland with the most expensive electricity (0.52$) that's 15.6$ per month with an average salary of 3860$ per month.
@@NemoRSRB It's not about how much it costs but about the misleading concept people have about how efficient AMD CPUs are when in reality they are not (as long your CPU is not under heavy load 100% of the time).
@@NemoRSRBOverall power consumption is lower on Intel CPU on normal daily usage where CPU is being utilized not even in 50% and most of the time is idling. AMD has to fix the issue with such a crazy high idle power consumption. That's it.
@@tomtomkowski7653 My normal daily usage consists of not only idling but 3-4 hours of gaming and I do some rendering as a hobby. I suspect most people use their PC's the same, i.e. don't only watch YT and play Solitaire. And I can assure you my 14900k overall consumes way more power than my friend's 7800x3d. Also, when measuring idle power draw you have to consider not only the CPU, but MB, memory, SSD's, RGB etc. I just checked some benchmark graphs and even a Ryzen 7950x system consumes at idle the same amount of power as a 10600k (around 70w). A 14900k system is at around 80w idle. So my friend the "issue" you are talking about doesn't really exist. When considering objective facts there is nothing to support your claim. I'm signing off, have a good one.
19k in Cinebench on factory defaults? My 14700k with -0.015V undervolting and cutting all boost power from 253/135 watts to 110/110 and all core boost ratios from x55/56 to x40 making 26000 in Cinebench with temperature not over 65-68 degrees Celsius. And it was 30400 on default settings.
From someone who makes guides, you should install your AiO properly. Right now you have all the air at the top of the reservoir by the hoses which makes the system run hotter. Hoses down!
I don't care about the temperature, but Incare about the power consumption. Great video. I would have appreciated a more in depths explanation on what the settings actually do, but it was good enough and i can just use Google.
I've changed my settings of my 7600X exactly to the example in this video, and it's stable after 2 hours of prime95. The temp went from 95 to 60 under stress, but the CPU benchmark score went from 10.5k to 8.5k. Which setting does affect performance the most? I want to crank up the performance to around stock level..
Not until I was 49 in 2007 did I finally Cave in and bought my first Acer laptop with Vista preinstalled and the books I read. At that time I was inundated with PC Nerds insisting XP was better and even into when Windows 7 first came out. That being said, Does start menu x include a windows 11 default option? Thanks for right click context menu but again, how do I go back to the default context menu if I want to stay in practice? I always recommend people should watch your videos if they want to improve after purchasing Windows 11.
It worked thank u, but my cinebench points are lower at max my cpu is at 95C but only get 17900 points and after I did the settings at 70-85C I only get 16900 points. I’m using 7700x as well
That would not be my way. Mine runs with around 1000 Points more performance compared to stock, boosts 100-200 Mhz higher, consumes about 30W less and has around 7 K lower temps with 150 RPM lower fan speed. CO setting is -25. And if you don't like tempatures over 80 degrees does not matter. These Ryzens are designt to boost to 95C or Ampere limits. This is how they work and should work. The Intel Alder and Raptor Lake boost till 100 Degrees. New times with new concepts. Also this temperatures are only visible in benchmarks or rendering.or semething like this. In games, they are much lower. So it isn't really a problem, or only a imagined one.
Hey 👋 there, I have a question about changing settings in the BIOS as I’m using the same BIOS as you are with my Asus B650E. Ok, my question is, If I change ANY settings in the “AI Tweaker” section, will it Overrule Any settings I change in the “Advanced” section of the BIOS? Please let me know if you can, I’m tryin to learn here.
I have a 7950x, I did this with optimizer curve -40 and PPT 85w and the temp is 48°c in cinebench 2024 and 1722 pts in multicore, idle is 31watts of ppt
You void the warranty by doing that. These settings should have been the stock setting AMD should have apply. But for marketing they push the limits. For the ryzen 8000 series i sm pretty certain they will reduce the temp at stock settings to not force people to void the warranty. Something is not good in the 7000 series to my opinion. First Motherboard on new sructure have always something wrong. If i can recommend, wait the 8000 series and probably new motherboard 770x. This is what i will do. I keep my old x370 and probably will upgrade from 1800x to 5900x upgrade gpu to 5090 then later build a new machine with 8000 v3d cache machine and move the 5090 on it, and put back the 1080ti on the 5900x am4 as second computer
PPT is NOT the temp limit, you're doing it wrong. PPT = TDP, in AMD terms, and it's measured in Watts. So, you're basically limiting your CPU power usage, which is not the right thing to do. Setting the temp limit at 80 or 85C is enough.
I am hoping for The Division 3 or similar, then i am gonna do this undervolting thingy, but for now Ryzen is my editing rig, couse they do this thing. Kinda like them open world ones, cba with Battlefield or COD. Fallout titles are more my taste. I have Intel i5 9400 for older games, works perfectly fine. Think the newer Intel chips have heating issues too ?
Thanks for this video, you literally saved me. Just built a new PC with a 7700x and while playing (Remnant 2) my CPU die average hit a max of 130c on HWinfo. The PC didn't crash, but screen wen't black for like 2-3 secs and the fps dropped from like 130 to 60 fps. Now after doing this my highest temp while playing the game was 85c. Cinebench was around 74c with a score of 19673. Could you perhaps make a video of why sometimes the screen goes black for like 2-3s but the PC doesn't lag or anything and nothing shuts down, just screen goes black for no reason and turns back on, i wonder if it's something to do with the RAM or just in general AMD CPU's? Before this i've had a PC for 6 years with a 7700k intel and 1080ti. Currently it's a ryzen 7 7700x with 7900 XT GPU
85°C while gaming is insanely hot. I have an overclocked 13900k and my temps never reach more than 60°C while gaming. Are you sure that's the actual temp while gaming and not the temp when compiling shaders or something else? The black screen issue is probably instability in your system. It's either overheating and shutting down or if you followed the steps in this video, your negative offset might be too high. Return everything to stock settings and see if it continues to happen. It's possible that your CPU cooler mount is incorrect and that's why your temps are so high.
Black screen could also be an issue with your HDMI/Display Port cable coming out of your GPU. It could be losing connection momentarily and then reconnecting.
@@jjlw2378 Nah man, my temp was only around 74°c when using cinebench, also i said i got an 7700x CPU, it's temps usually go around 95°c stock. I'm using a tower cooler, not liquid. So the steps from the video helped me. But i will try to use another DP-cable, might fix the black screen, it goes black for 2-3s and comes back, but no stutters or anything it happens randomly not just while gaming. Before i did the steps on this video my CPU reached 130°c on HWinfo. And i noticed the game dropped significantly in performance there. Only happened in "Remnant 2" the game
I went on full PBO manual and set up -30 on the 2 preferred cores (noted them in Ryzen master) and -22 on all other cores because full all cores -30 was not full stable. You can also limit downwards vour VDD Core voltage to ease on the CPU (1.20v instead of 1.3v auto) on my silicon piece. Thank's.
On the curve optimiser, you said some people can get away with - 30. When I run ryzen master curve optimiser it sets mine to - 50 after it's 30min test. I get a max boost just shy of 5.5ghz. Is that good? This is my first build since the fx days. I have a 7600x currently.
It's bizarre, my 5900X pulled 235W and never got hotter than 88C. Meanwhile, these 7000 series blast to 95+ with only 145W.. they should have never made the IHS so thicc
My 7800x3D idles around 43-48c when I game it goes up to 63c to 82c is that normal? I haven’t use the steps in this video yet. My gpu stays around 48-54c.. Edit: I tried this and now my pc idles at 34-44 degrees and GPU stays at 34 idle after doing some tweaks to the gpu as well. Now gaming my max is ~50-77 degrees and the clock speed stays at 5GHz in all cores now for some reason! So this is very nice
7800 x3d cooling under an air Assassin 120 cooler E, single fan. On a cool morning such as today 8/3/2024 sits at 47.5 C, a hot afternoon (95) sits at 51.3 C - 55.4 C. Seems normal under air cooled set up.
After about 20 years of Intel CPU setups I just built a Ryzen 7700 system and went with AMD for the first time. What can I say .... I'm here troubleshooting my build because CPU is idling at 45 Degrees. For comparison: My old Core I5 6600k was idling at about 20 Degrees. I know this was a special CPU that could even run without any cooler for some time because of the low temp / efficient temp management. But guys we are in 2023, I just don't want my 7 year old CPU be cooler and more efficient that my new one. Especially since I bought it BECAUSE of it's efficiency. Now it looks like my temps might not be normal and you can tweak / workaround / fix that in BIOS. But WHY do I have to do that? Is it that hard to force some sane factory defaults for new AMD CPU's? Why the heck do I have to deal with voltages and tuning params? Is this how AMD is trying to feel more geeky or hardcore by forcing people into BIOS or are they just stupid? AMD may have decent hardware but Software and drivers suck since the very beginning. And now coming back after years it looks like nothing changed. You may argue that this is not AMDs fault but the Mainboard Manufacturer's fault. But I really don't care. Then AMD should talk to MB Vendors and find a way to make it work. Always and out-of-the-box. My Intel based ASUS Boards never needed tweaking. But again, maybe I'm just unlucky this time. I hope it feels more like a good investment after the next days. Anyway thanks for the fix. I'll give it a try
CPU idling at 45 I completely normal. If you are complaining about the efficiency and temperature of the CPU, the modern Intel chips are completely off the scale then. Intel chips are run extremely hot and are very inefficient compared to AMD processors.
Dude, AMD is meant to run at high temperatures. Specially the 7000 series since its TDP is 105w whereas the previous gens and your Intel is 65w. You don't have to go into your bios to fix anything. You can use it as it is but like the video says, he just prefers lower temps. I jumped from Intel to AMD and despite the higher temps (which its supposed to be at), one of the best decisions you could ever make. If temps ever bother you, then AMD isn't for you.
Yeah I don’t know about your results or your method. I think using Ryzen Master with the per core optimization feature and testing is much easier and effective.
Hello what board you using and can you tell me if you have some issues? And whats your temp of cpu in test? I have too 78003xd And dont know how to set it up
@@SoW-CE hi, im using the Asus strix x670e-a Mainboard. Since im utilising Precision Boost Overdrive, the CPU Always goes to ~80°C under heavy load. If you just want stability dont mess with core Offset described in this Video. It is also important to install the latest BIOS update & chipset drivers and then enabling Expo
@@bolamatyp i have latest bios gigabyte b 650 aorus, ryzen 7 7800x3d, And 65 temp max but i played only "The isle evrima" with that so i need test another Games... But i think max GHz core is 4.80.. For me.. IS safe make it to 5.0?
@@SoW-CE my CPU doesnt hit 5ghz even with PBO. I would not advise to overclock the CPU manually, since the 3D-Vcache chips are extremly sensitive to temperature. For Games it doesnt even matter, the 7800x3d is almost entitely bottlenecked in most modern games, squeezing Maximum performance out of it in exchange for stability isnt worth it IMO.
Let me know in comments did it work for you.
Sorry but you forgot to show us what was an actual performance drop by scrolling to hwinfo cpu tab where it shows frequency and core multiplyers.
In my short experience, curve optimizer is already enough to make cpu go faster and cooler due to more thermal headroom. Its basically an undervolt as if its were a gpu.
thanks for the great video.....
I've got a 7600x and B650e-f and I recently enabled PBO and set it to 'Enhancement' and then 'Level 2 - 80c' and my PC wouldn't boot/BsoD windows repair.
It booted again when I cleared the settings.
The only other setting I have changed prior to this is the DDR to 6000mhz in EXPO1, which is stable.
Did my PC not boot because I didn't change the 'curve optimizer' as well?
I'm a bit nervous to try again as I don't want to corrupt my Win11 Install / Nvme Drive.
You mention the 'sweet spot' in the curve, I'm not really sure what that means. What does 30/15 etc relate to?
Sorry for the questions, Thank you
I got an Asrock 650-e pg itx, can you tell me how to go about this in my bios? Please :/
i dont understand, we got the same CPU but my cinebench score is 1102. crazy yours was 19000
@@altiboxtv9570 I had this one and had to return it... there was no way to flash any other bios version after flashing once to the newest.
This was greatly helpful. Im running a 7700x and a MSI Mobo. I was watching YT videos and my CPU would start ramping up to 67 degrees celsius with my fans ramping up loudly. After doing this im running constantly around 40 C with quiet fans. Much appreciated.
Did you lose performance after this or it stills being the same?
@@SaulPeralta218 Still the same!
I can’t find the curve optimizer in my MSI BIOS. Did you?
Never mind. IGNORE
Can I do the same seeting with 5950x?
Definitely do this people.. it will drastically reduce fan noise, and also help keep your other components cooler, Definitely worth losing a couple % in performance
its called underclocking.
I'm just playing CODM in Gameloop. do you think this is okay?
I did this and my % performance even increased, so yeah, just do it.
@@ayayotoko yes
@@gontzalcaig That may depend on the "silicon lottery"; exceptional parts could perform better even undervolted, while bad parts could perform worse. But either way it's a good idea. Save power and extend the lifespan of your parts, take the few % hit if necessary.
With my 7600x a negative 30 offset alone brought the cpu temps down 10°C and my cinebench and 3d mark results got better too.
The best thing is though that when i open games like Cyberpunk or Metro Exodus now, my fans don't ramp up for a short time as high as before, its really pleasent now.
Thanks for making this video!
Damn, my same CPU can only do a negative offset of 10. I guess you won the silicon lottery
@@Quinsterrr mine is shit as fuck, negative of 5, and i get random restart....7600x fucking shit, that's my luck
@@motorkr2857 mine stable at -25, -30 crash 1 and never try 30 again.
5600x, same thing! temperatures even better
After a month i had random restart but no bsod, so it’s not stable?
Thank you so much, the temps got a lot better and the performance was strangely BETTER.
thank you for mentioning to low the Curve Optimizer at 25,20 and below if we have problem with windows, i actually did at 30,25 and 20, but at 15 everything works fine now
Sorry dumb but is going lower better?
same as mine
I wanted to thank you, i have changed a bit the settings you showed in this video, and now my pc works greater than ever!!
THANK YOU! I usually dont comment alot but my temps went from 95C when trying to run a specific game down to 60C! Anyone with a AMD 7700X consider this before making any hardware changes. I almost bought an AIO cooler thinking that my PC was running too hot!
I did buy an big aio thinking it ran hot just to get the exact performance that I got from my pearless assassin air cooler
Yo bro this is what I’m literally going through right now , I stream & play warzone but my cpu hits 95c which makes my whole pc run hot ash & I keep lagging & dropping fps , I know it’s my cpu cuz that the only thang heating up , my gpu stays 65 or less so idk what to do ?
@@Thatdemon01 its just how the am5 cpus operate but you can do a slight undervolt to fix fps drops
@@Yung_CL4Y what bios setting should change cuz these didn’t work out for me
@@Thatdemon01 I’ll put a video up on my channel later tonight to show a nice undervolt for good temps it’s pretty easy to set up
Thank you for the tips I have the 7700x and when I was gaming my temps would of gone up in the 80 now it stays cool
Did you apply this same settings? Mine could not handle -30 I set it to -25
What are you averaging?
@@AuburnMan on games i average around high 60
How did you do it brother , I need help , I stream & play warzone but I hit 95 idk if I need a new cpu cooler or just do this but I don’t wanna lose performance
You should also decrease SoC voltage, 1.35V is way too much. Based on my vast experience with a total number of two Ryzen 7xxx CPUs, going as low as 1.15V is pretty much risk free (with EXPO enabled), while reducing uncore power to a significant degree. This way you get lower idle consumption (and temps) and "more power" for CCDs (if TDP is what limits you, which will be the case for all non-X CPUs running more than two-three cores at full load).
I'm thinking of buying the x670e aorus master with 7700x. Is the issue of VSOC voltage resolved with the new bios revisions in Gigabyte? I couldn't find anything on this topic neither on Reddit nor Buildzoid's videos. Thanks in advance for answering.
@@hititsenpai7615 it was "resolved" with F10 BIOS in May. Latest version is F13d with the latest AGESA.
I got an Asrock 650-e pg itx, can you tell me how to go about this in my bios? Please :/
I have the exact settings from the video copied apart from setting the curve optimiser from 30 to 20 because I think that it is stable.
I am running an AMD Ryzen 5 7600x and have lowered the SoC voltage to 1.15v. However, my PC runs fine, it's just once or twice, I do encounter application crashes.
I don't know what to change to prevent this? Either increase/decrease my voltage or increase/decrease the curve optimiser?
Other than that, I definitely do recommend people to do this as overall temp lower, power consumption lower and in some cases performance increases. This has happened to me in my case with my CPU.
@@isxmiyulll this is how I do it - it might take couple of days, but it's necessary if you want your system stable:
1. BIOS settings to default, restart
2. Upgrade BIOS to latest
3. BIOS settings to default, restart
4. Enable EXPO, boot to windows, run OCCT stress test (1h CPU, 1h RAM), or equivalent. If there are errors, there's problem with RAM modules.
5. Decrease SoC voltage and stress test, until you find stable minimum
6. (optional) Decrease VDD IO and run memory stress test - the difference here isn't huge and some boards (MSI latest bios) don't even allow this, when I forced it via ryzen master, I ran into issues.
7. Increase negative Curve Optimizer value and test for CPU stability. You might want to use varying load at 1-2 cores so they're pushed to the max.
Stable minimums will depend on multiple factors, so it's hard to recommend specific values.
I don't recommend using "memory context restore", though. It makes boot almost instant, but it might impact stability quite significantly.
Thank you so much!
i'm using ryzen 5 7600(non x) and my temp was rising to 75-80 ° during cpu intensive games like cyberpunk and battlefield 2042.after doing this i'm getting 55-60 ° with almost the same performance
It worked very fine! I played around a little bit and set it on PBO 30 with the PPT limit on 100 watts (7700x). Now i got smooth 69C with the AiO (Arctic Freezer 3 - 240) set on 27%. Its so quiet and cool. Lovely! Cinebench R23 score is 19241 (90 watts was 18894 and stock was 19160) Thanks a lot!
With a 7900x my score at first was 25k but the temps where also at 95C the limit. After doing the steps here It went to 24.5k, but the temps dropped dramatically all the way to 55-60C!
Same settings? Mines boots to blue screen with the 7900x
@@Daveed2407 I'm planning to do the same for my 7900x, but noticed that hes running a 7700x. Did you ever find the right settings to prevent the blue screen while booting?
@@buffalowxngs1512 PPT 230, TDC 160, EDC 225 for 170W AM5 Processors.
@JoseDanielGonzalezGil what about the 7800x3d rated at 120w
Thanks for the video. On looking at the hardware info voltages your soc voltage is 1.35. With the recent reports of burnt cpu's would be better to reduce this down manually to 1.25 or put a newer bios version on to hard lock it at 1.30v. Thanks man.
Isn't that what the curve optimizer does? Undervolting?
People should know that anything below 95 degrees *isn't* a problem. It will not harm your CPU's lifespan in any significant capacity. You will replace your CPU when it gets outdated long before it starts to wear out. It's only if you do some serious overclocking or your CPU is constantly thermal throttling that it begins to wear out in any meaningful timeframe.
Also note that during a benchmark like Cinebench, your CPU temps will be much higher than in any real world applications such as gaming. The moments where it does heat up are typically so few and short that it's nothing to concern yourself with.
What you do get from the lower temps is that your room won't get as hot and your CPU cooler won't be as loud. Lower wattage also means you save some money on electricity. However, it's usually the GPU that's the determining factor here, not a Ryzen CPU. Graphics cards use way more power and generate way more heat these days, your CPU doesn't have that big of an impact.
what is "throttling" exactly? also im using the 7700 and boy this thing loves to go straight to 90 when i do any gaming or downloading at all and i have no idea why, it usually mellows out around 85 after a while but im not sure why it does this
@@The_Panda62 90 is nothing. It's design to run in beast mode every chance it gets. I don't think these CPUs can thermal throttle by design. I did a manual oc and it just shut off when I accidentally let it over heat at 105c. Clocks never throttle, just shut off.
@@MrC8025 yeah I ended up undervolting it and capping it at 85, it’s just annoying because my fans are loud as shit
@@The_Panda62 so change your fan curve, also if your gpu is running open air cooling having better case flow could help or setting a custom fan curve on the gpu to help keep temps down a bit. the cpu is not that power hungry to need lots of cooling. its just auto boosting to give the best performance. you could also set the cpu to eco mode and it would reduce temps / fan noise.
@pwningpanda3826 uses fan speed software and adjusts its curve to ur liking. the sudden fan noise is due to ur computer thinking the 70c on ur cpu is bad and it need to run it in high speed fan but in reality 70c to 80c is normal for ryzen 7 when gaming to transferring file to installing game etc etc
This helped alot. It also helped my gpu usage go up because for some reason my cpu was trying to be the star of the show.
I copied your bios settings and went from 91.3C to 71,1C MAX temp, I didn't know this was a problem until I saw my temp numbers... Thank you!
Anything below 95 degrees *isn't* a problem. It will not harm your CPU's lifespan in any significant capacity. You will replace your CPU when it gets outdated long before it starts to wear out. It's only if you do some serious overclocking or your CPU is constantly thermal throttling that it begins to wear out in any meaningful timeframe.
Also note that during a benchmark like Cinebench, your CPU temps will be much higher than in any real world applications such as gaming. The moments where it does heat up are typically so few and short that it's nothing to concern yourself with.
What you do get from the lower temps is that your room won't get as hot and your CPU cooler won't be as loud. Lower wattage also means you save some money on electricity. However, it's usually the GPU that's the determining factor here, not a Ryzen CPU. Graphics cards use way more power and generate way more heat these days, your CPU doesn't have that big of an impact.
@@Forty2de when mining monero what would be the ideal undervolt? i want to get maximum efficiency where i mine with the least amount of power consumption. how do i do that on a gigabyte motherboard? there are no guides on the internet so i dont know how to do this. im new to these things and has zero experience with gigabyte motherboards
@@Forty2de🤡
I got an Asrock 650-e pg itx, can you tell me how to go about this in my bios? Please :/
I got an Asrock 650-e pg itx, can you tell me how to go about this in my bios? Please :/@@Forty2de
or dont i need to toanything
Thanks. I built my 7600x new PC yesterday, I was frightened to see that at only 50% load, the temperature instantly went up to 80+° , even with a quite good Assassin 120 SE. resulting in lots of noise from the cpu fan!
U can use fan speed software and adjust ur fan speed to reasonable speed cause ryzen 7 has a normal high temperature, it was meant to be like that but ur pc wont think it normal so u gotta adjust the fan
i have a 7600x with aio cooler idle at 38C and while gaming for like 6h its only hit around 50C
@@450__TP yes, but you can only achieve this with undervolting as explained in tutorials. With stock motherboard settings/voltage, it's a mess 🙂
@@MrCrrispy nope when mine was stock I hade those temp
@@450__TP yeah sure, it's a special one... 😅
Please consider making a very detailed video on updating BIOS. This video was awesome, and I know there are loads of people like me who are totally lost when it comes to this.
A detailed, step by step video would be extremely helpful!
Asus new bios release says something about using bios renamer? I'm already lost there.
I got an Asrock 650-e pg itx, can you tell me how to go about this in my bios? Please :/
ASUS manual literally explains BIOS update? Renamer is in the file that you download for the bios.
Format a flash drive
Download your EXACT motherboards BIOS. Make sure it’s also the correct version of the board.
Extract the bios download and copy and paste only the main file (about 30mb in size usually) to the formatted flash drive.
Plug that flash drive into a USB port and boot into BIOS.
Find the BIOS flash option and then select that 30mb file and proceed with update.
Make sure to not mess with the pc during update until it states it completed. Usually about 1-3mins to update.
Then reboot into BIOS page and check to see if the newer version is installed.
Great stuff! I had issues using Ryzen master but this way seems to be stable so far. Using a 7600X with a noctua nhd15 I'm maxing out at 67°C during a R23 all core test.
@@Kolestroll-cg1hx my temps were down from about 92°C to 67°C after following the process in the video...
I got an Asrock 650-e pg itx, can you tell me how to go about this in my bios? Please :/
@@altiboxtv9570 nah, I'm not familiar with Asrock bios's sorry.
Google it
What are your idle temps before nd after?
Hey everyone , I have watched 50+ videos re arranging bios settings and tried many softwares but nothing worked for the past 3 weeks as i person who has received a new pc i was worried but after wasting my time on all of these videos , I went to my guy who build my pc and he changed the orientation of my cpu cooler fan. My cpu on idle ( 60°C ) and under load ( 100°C ) went to 25°C on idle and 60°C under load . Hope this helped ❤❤❤❤
i dont get it.
Tldr his guy wrongly faced the CPU fan
I'm glad I watched this. I'm selecting components to build a robust mid-range gaming system and was considering AMD for my CPU, currently I'm running an i5-4590 with a Radeon HD 7900 graphics card and the temperature is 31° C... according to Crystal Disk 8.
A lot has changed in ten years and the learning curve is steep... but now I have the time to research.
Thanks for watching
The people that have problems will never tell you, what they are bios setting or how they are cooling the CPU.
1 guy is running ram at 6200 so the soc is running at 1.45 volts all the time on the old Bios.
The new bios runs the soc at 1.3 volts at max
I think one can get more optimal results tinning negative voltage by core. -30 on all cores might not work for all. And one should run a battery of tests before assuming a tune is stable. On my 7900X, curve optimizer values vary from 0 to -20 depending on cores. That with eco mode +10% gives me a lot of performance never getting overly hot.
make sure you get a good cooler and update the BIOS as soon as you can. i heard stories of peopIe frying their CPUs, especially the ones with the X3Ds. even my low end 7600 can get quite hot for some strange reason. RAM instability is also a common issue. my motherboard had the old 2022 BIOS. freezing and crashing stopped after i updated BIOS
I got an Asrock 650-e pg itx, can you tell me how to go about this in my bios? Please :/
I want to thank u for this video! My 7900x3d was running at high 80s during cinebench, but after this I got Max 69C
Just finished my new build with a 7600X and damn does it run hot! It likes to spike a ton and it has plenty of thermal paste. I am seriously about to send this air cooler back and get an AIO to help bring the noise down.
Great stuff, I readjusted with cpu 5800x3D -- temps max is 10 degree lower and 3Dmark rezults for Time Spy -- on cpu 500 score higher ! From 9800 to 10300 ! and temps to be excat from 92 to 82.4
The 7600x are designed to work at 95C and then it throttles its performance according to how good cooling you provide it with. Misunderstood reaction to a non existing problem. You might get some extra performance by a bit undervoltage.
To make sure the curve optimizer won't make the system unstable, i suggest using the auto curve optimizer in ryzen master and put the result in the bios.
I have never got a stable result using Ryzen master, doing it this way in the bios has worked great for me!
I got an Asrock 650-e pg itx, can you tell me how to go about this in my bios? Please :/
@@altiboxtv9570hit delete on startup to enter bios. There should be a fan optimizer option that'll do it for you automatically. Then toggle your curve manually from there if you wish.
But ryzen master can change the values in the bios right? why you want to input them into the bios then??
I needed a faster way of frying some eggs. Time to buy Ryzen 7000
lol nutter
95c is fine.
Edit- also, Guess you know no one with a 13900ks. Weird.
@@96kylar I know a few with them. Guess you never seen sarcasm before
Pretty odd I run @ 4k never go over 75-80 c norm 76c
get a 9k series and you get an air fryer
Got mine to 100%load 60deg on 1st try, might tinker with it later on. great guide!
i hate how comapnies say “that is normal”. in the car word manufactures will say 1 quart of oil per 1k miles is “normal” just so that they can get away with the flawed design behind low friction piston rings. Then a true solution arises and they try to spin the change in their favor.
Easiest is to bump the amps and wattage in the eco from 65W to 80W, for a total of 105W (vs the stock 105W with a real usage of ~150W).
The temp limit sometimes don't work, and still will allow the CPU to do above the set limit.
@ProDigit80 how would you do this? Eco mode is 65 but then how do you change it to 80
Great video. Small performance hit and a large improvement in temps!
Exactly
7.3% drop in temperature (-27K) and 40% drop in power consumption (-58W) for a 3.4% drop in performance. Not bad. Definitely worth it in this case.
Agree 100% well worth doing with high power chips.
I got an Asrock 650-e pg itx, can you tell me how to go about this in my bios? Please :/
@altiboxtv9570 try finding a video on UA-cam. Basically you can dial down the system clock 5% or so and drop the voltage on the CPU 5-10%, also the memory voltage a few percent. You dial down and then test for stability, maybe run Cinebench for 10 minutes and see if it's stable. With the clock speed and voltages reduced you may get a 20% decrease in power for a small reduction in clock speed
Curve ball, but that first run, within 5k on cinebench of that w-3265m - 24 cores and hyper threaded, and only 4 ish years old, AMD are absolutely smashing it
Helped me out alot thank you had finished my build aand thought my cooler was bad
Went from 90 c to 50 to 60 under gaming loads
It's always better to run @ lower temps if no other reason than to increase component longevity. Another thing you can do is use either AMD's toolkit or maybe your motherboards software ex: (MSI or evga) to under-volt the CPU/APU you can lookup online what safe voltages are & this will also decrease your temps while usually improving your base & boost clock speeds & will also prevent thermal throttling. If your unsure both Gamer's Nexus & Linus Tech Tips have extensive vids oh the how & why this works with both benchmarks & real-world application testing as proof.
I agree
i don't know. If it's design to run at 95c 24/7, I don't really care about the temps. I'll use co to get higher clocks but that's about it. Most people like myself will hardly ever full load anyway. It'always in the 50s during my gaming sessions.
@@MrC8025 I think the problem that we've been seeing with "ASUS burning out AMD chips" though is exactly related to this issue. The way AMD designed it is that if it's not going past 95c then we can give it more power, so the chipset itself may be designed to run at 95c however that says nothing about the interface with the LGA and the chipset. But you're right, if you don't use 100% load then the CPU isn't getting that high, and that benchmarking tools like this are designed specifically to run it at 100% load, however there are the case where it may get to full load and if it doesn't get as hot as you want you could get arcing occurring which again fries your chip and MB. If your primary usage is gaming, there's no real negative to just throwing it into eco mode and not have to ever worry about the power issue.
@@Britec09then why buy a 7950x. Buy a 7800xt and over clock it. Why are you even scared or worried ?
@@Mike__Band wrong. ASUS x670e-e since November been fine . I bought another one.
I've never had problems with high CPU temperatures, but I did have an old Dell Latitude laptop that did get very warm, unusually hot, even when only doing basic tasks. I found out it's cpu thermal paste had gotten pretty dry, maybe it needed a thermal repaste. I don't have experience doing that sort of thing though.
Thanks
@@Britec09 Great video by the way 👍
I have extensive experience doing that sort of thing having worked in a computer repair shop for 7 years. Avoid it if you don't know what you're doing as you can cause more harm than good.
@@jTheDigitalDoctor Ok. Interesting. I would love to learn how to do a thermal repaste someday.
@@technoWZ5598 Well, usually the whole laptop has to come apart and depending upon the orientation of the board the board may have to come out. From there it's usually about 4 screws that hold in the heatsink. You pop them out and apply a pea sized amount of quality thermal compound and spread it out with a credit card over the surface of the chip then tighten the screws back up. Here's where a lot of people screw up-they apply too much torque on the screws. All that does is cause the sink to bend and squeeze out the paste. Just tighten to slightly over finger tightness in a star pattern and you're done. Eventually your Dell will overheat without fresh thermal compound-at the very least the longevity of the device will be shortened due to the heat and performance affected. Heat creates entropy in the system which results in performance degradation. But Latitudes are old and no longer produced I believe so your best bet is to buy another laptop anyways. Yep.
Guys modern cpus don't work like old ones. They are designed to run like this, when they get close to 95 they cool off by letting you use less power etc.
It's fine, so just let them run like they are designed, you're just adding trouble to something thats not an issue.
Putting maximum processor state in windows power plan to 99% instead of 100% will largely reduce termals on CPU, and a bit of performance. r7 7800xd3 went from 84C to 55-65C under load with this simple change. It is also worth mentioning that UE 5 likes to push amd products beyond it's limits, going over 100C on both CPU and GPU. You have to limit it.
I undervolted my i5 once so it could run boost clocks indefinitely, this old trick definitely can make a hot processor much more efficient under load.
Thanks for this video i tried doing a negative 30 on my 7700xand it worked first try. I'm playing bf2042 and in 128 player maps i was getting a temp of 84-85 and now it stays around 70-73. In baldurs gate 3 and cyberpunk I'm seeing about a 15c drop as well. My cinebench 2024 score also went from 1062 to 1104. I'm using a peerless assassin for my cooler.
Did you copy all his settings? Or something else? I run the 7 7700x aswell and it gets very hot
@@joelkaufmann1601 I just set the curve to negative 30 like he did and that's it. I tried setting it to eco mode but it caused noticable fps drop in bf2042 conquest 128 player
7800x3d... checked my temp while gaming 59C.. and i only have 1 case fan so far because i've been too lazy to put the others in. Cheapest possible air cooler i could find for the CPU btw ( Cooler Master Hyper 212 EVO V2, like 32 euro / 32 usd)
yeah i dun get it, I'm running the same 7700x he is and temps under heavy load push 78-79 degrees C with no knee-capping. I'm running a cheap 360 rad but I guess it's working.
I went from 85 degrees to stable 55 degrees, but there was a dramatic performance reduction. I really don't see how this would be useful at all because you might as well get a less powerful chip instead of just decreasing performance like this.
Exactly, just buy a lower tdp processor. What is the point of buying the x variant.
This helped a lot Thank you very much. My pc no longer sounds like a jet engine when starting a game and temps are 70 instead of 85 🎉🎉
I did this for my new build, ASUS B650E-F with 7700X, and it ran okay for about a week, then my ASUS B650E-F motherboard starting getting BIOS boot failures (CPU and VGA lights on). Turned the power off and restarted and it passed the BIOS successfully, but then failed the same way on the next reboot. Changed the setting back to the way they were and NO more BIOS problems. No thanks. Funky.
that 0-30 thingie is not 100 % stable, and thse bench tests doesnt show . if soemthing doesnt work try lovering your number by 5 .
Definitely shaved a few degrees on average on my 7800x3d. Thanks
145w to 87w, or 66% more power consumption for only 3,5% more points on cinebench. 100% worth controlling those temperatures. And most likely longer life.
Great video. Followed this and got great results
Well I set this to 40 and to my surprise system works fine ran a cinebench23 30 min stress test with a result of 19300approx
while on stock it was around 19700
other settings I did was i set the power draw to 115watts and temperature limit to 85.
I am running a ML240 cooler from Colermaster , Oh yeah boost clock goes to 5.1ghz and stablizes around 5.06ghz
Isnt it ironic that he bought a 6-10% faster CPU just to throttle down it by 5%?
1% stonks is 1% stonks
Same cpu, same settings. In cinebench, cpu never went past 59c. In helldivers 2, cpu went up to 69c. Considering it was going up to 90+, pretty good improvement.
Using Ryzen masters curve optimizer legit lowered my temps by 15 degrees in some all core load situations.
It does take about a hour, but it will give you the best undervolt for each core, if you set it to do per core.
Hi, can you explain how to do this? I'm a newbie and couldn't find the option in Ryzen Master to calculate the optimal undervolt parameters. Also, once I have these parameters, where do I need to establish them? In the BIOS?
Thank you in advance :)
@@borjairanzo6113 Just switch to simple mode, and select per core, and then click optimize. It'll take a hour or two. But it will offer you some uplift, depends how well you won the silicone lotterly. For me I got a really good undervolt.
Thanx again for your very informative video. May I ask? Does this work for the X570 motherboards also. i am currently using a amd ryzen 9 5950x. Lastly always good to save some on the electricity bills. Thanx.
I did one for x570 3800x
De-lid the badly done interface plate. Not exceptably done by Amd. Go custom. Nice work with this one's settings, Britec09.
I always reduce the voltage on my Ryzen processors. It makes little difference in day to day business operations. I do Audio, video editing and I also am a programmer and gamer.
My 7600X is as cool as cucumber. Tested it and it went all core 6ghz. Temps under 70 degrees. Which I wouldn’t want full time. But for 6ghz seems brilliant. Now It reaches 5.8ghz on 2 or 3 cores under load and typically temps are low 60s. I might have just got lucky. Outperforms my old i9 from only 2 years earlier by some margin across the board.
70degrees for 7600x is low x) this gpu is made to go to 85-90 and stay at that temp. max temps is 95
No more screaming fans after making these changes in the bios. With my 7900x I set it to curve 25 since 30 crashed it on boot up. Thermal limit set to 85. Cinebench score is currently 26241 20 pass test multicore.
Your channel is God sent. Thank you.
Hello ty for vid, did u touch anything on Ryzen Master?
Thank you for your work creating this video. Could you make the same video for an Intel based computer?
I can do
I tried -30 to my 7600x & boy now it runs at 75°C max while playing Cyberpunk. There have been no crashes or anything like that I think it's stable.
I have a 7600x that I have the PBO offset set to 80 and the max temp at 80C, it draws 65w usually. Bought it when they were new and have been running it like this for almost a year now.
60.5c max temp.
90.w max
5,126.8 MHz avg
And cinebench score of 19264
Awesome guide mate, cheers very much for putting this info up. Did not like seeing those 95c temps
I’m having issues heat issues but with an SFF build. Trying the video settings. It baffles me how high this chip runs. Even with a 240 AIO. Went with a 95 PPT, think I should go higher with a 7800x3d?
I got an Asrock 650-e pg itx, can you tell me how to go about this in my bios? Please :/
You can go even further. Buy Arctic LF III 420mm AiO and lower temps to 65*C full load xD. This cooler cost 88usd in eu right now.
(I've made hole to make it "fit" XD).
I have a 7800X3D and a NZXT Kraken 360 Elite aio cooler. Using stock thermal paste that came on the aio, my temps are 40-50 idle, and 45-65 while gaming. Under a hour stress test in OCCT at 100% load, highest temp I saw on the CPU was 78C. Is this considered good?
Good temps
Were these temps with stock settings or after applying the changes shown in the video?
mine are about the same too and i have the exact same setup
Ew kraken, money dump
I have 7600x and now TTP 95w and magnitude 40. Temperature are about 76-77 celsius maxload. Cinebench score rise 14253 ---> 14661. I could tweak settings even lower if i want even more cool running system. My start point was 95 celsius. When im gaming my cpu is like only 55-59 celsius, so its pretty good now.
Could you please help me out if possible how to do that or some advice, ive tried the offset but only managed -10 , anything above that was crashing whenever i oppened a program in the background, do you think its also maybe cuz of the ram im running expo on 6000mhz
@@vaceffl33t85 i dont thing that memory doesn't effect. I found that in gaming i need to use 30 or it crashes eventyally. Did you also lower your power consuption? How big power you have. If you follow video advice it shoulf be working atleast magnitude 20 negative. What motherboard you have?
@@jp4361 I crashed even on -15 cinebench was okay 10mins but later on opening stuff on desktop, im on -10 atm seems stable, my motherboard is b650m ds3h
@@jp4361 What is it called in bios to lower power consuption?
@@vaceffl33t85 I have gigabyte motherboard so i have Advancet cpu settings, precicion boost overdrive, PBO limit, PPT limit [mw] 90000. That means my cpu maximum power is 90000 mw ---> 90 wats. If you have different motherboard, it can be wats or milliwats. Many of these youtubers but PPT limit to 80wats/80000mw, so cpu is even cooler. Second setting i have now Curve optimizer ---> all cores, All core curve optimizer sign ---> negative, all core curve opzimizer magnitude----> 30. It depens your system and luck how high you can put that magnitude, but its like 10-30. That PPT limit is the main thing that lower your cpu temperature. Try 90w or if you want even lower temperature then 80w.
Similar to my previous AM4 3800X CPU, undervaluing and not using the default offering of the AMD precision boost with very minor tweaks would always result in better FPS due to sustained clocks and lower temps. I find the method of the negative curve and thermal limit on my 7800X3D works very well at keeping temps down while actually maximizing CPU clockss due to lower temps. In you Cinabench test you lost about 500 points for workload but in games you may actually gain FPS due to maintained higher clocks.
Thank you! It works with 7600 cpu and also increase slightly the results! I just dont put a power limit, and its fine
could you please explain what changes have you made? thank you and also, please let me know what parts you're using (cpu cooler, case etc..)
@@darkod3380 this is what im running on my R5 7600X
Precision Boost Overdrive = Manual
PPT Limit 100
CPU Boost Clock Override = Enabled (Positive)
Max CPU Boost Clock Override(+) = 50
Platform Thermal Throttle Limit = Manual
Platform Thermal Throttle Limit = 90
Curve Optimizer = All Cores
All Core Curve Optimizer Sign = Negative
All Core Curve Optimizer Magnitude = 20 (Should be as high as possible but 20 is likely fine if you don't want to test it, mine does 26)
@@SwedishTerminator do you think i have access to these changes with R5 7600?
@@darkod3380it all depends on your motherboard and settings might have a bit different naming, but should be almost the same
Cookbook approach with no explanation of WHY doing these things would help (or why you should apply these limits rather than any other of the vast range of limits available through the BIOS).
7700x on air (NH-14s) on a Asus TUF B650 (thrash motherboard) same settings, -30, 85 w, 85 degrees - 19246 CB23 with 80 degrees and 86 w .
I’ve had zero issues on my 7950x build. Run eco mode just cause I can but without that, no problems.
The biggest problem is here at 1:36 and here at 9:09
No matter what you do AMD CPUs still use a lot of power when idle. Now think for a second how much time your CPU is on idle (just OS, browser, YT, etc) and how much time it is on 100% workload. The end result may be shocking but overall Intel CPUs are using less power. Yes, they use more under 100% load but instead of 30W-55W on idle Intel CPUs are using 8W-9W.
Let's say your CPU runs 24H with 40w power draw. That's 960w in total but let's round it up to 1kW. That's 30kW for a month. With the world average kW/h price of 0.15$ that's 4.5$ per month. For who exactly is this a "problem"? Even in Ireland with the most expensive electricity (0.52$) that's 15.6$ per month with an average salary of 3860$ per month.
@@NemoRSRB It's not about how much it costs but about the misleading concept people have about how efficient AMD CPUs are when in reality they are not (as long your CPU is not under heavy load 100% of the time).
@@tomtomkowski7653 Using more power in idle doesn't mean overall Intel CPU's use less power. This is what it's about and this makes no sense to me.
@@NemoRSRBOverall power consumption is lower on Intel CPU on normal daily usage where CPU is being utilized not even in 50% and most of the time is idling. AMD has to fix the issue with such a crazy high idle power consumption. That's it.
@@tomtomkowski7653 My normal daily usage consists of not only idling but 3-4 hours of gaming and I do some rendering as a hobby. I suspect most people use their PC's the same, i.e. don't only watch YT and play Solitaire. And I can assure you my 14900k overall consumes way more power than my friend's 7800x3d. Also, when measuring idle power draw you have to consider not only the CPU, but MB, memory, SSD's, RGB etc. I just checked some benchmark graphs and even a Ryzen 7950x system consumes at idle the same amount of power as a 10600k (around 70w). A 14900k system is at around 80w idle. So my friend the "issue" you are talking about doesn't really exist. When considering objective facts there is nothing to support your claim. I'm signing off, have a good one.
19k in Cinebench on factory defaults? My 14700k with -0.015V undervolting and cutting all boost power from 253/135 watts to 110/110 and all core boost ratios from x55/56 to x40 making 26000 in Cinebench with temperature not over 65-68 degrees Celsius. And it was 30400 on default settings.
From someone who makes guides, you should install your AiO properly. Right now you have all the air at the top of the reservoir by the hoses which makes the system run hotter. Hoses down!
I don't care about the temperature, but Incare about the power consumption. Great video. I would have appreciated a more in depths explanation on what the settings actually do, but it was good enough and i can just use Google.
I've changed my settings of my 7600X exactly to the example in this video, and it's stable after 2 hours of prime95. The temp went from 95 to 60 under stress, but the CPU benchmark score went from 10.5k to 8.5k. Which setting does affect performance the most? I want to crank up the performance to around stock level..
Not until I was 49 in 2007 did I finally Cave in and bought my first Acer laptop with Vista preinstalled and the books I read. At that time I was inundated with PC Nerds insisting XP was better and even into when Windows 7 first came out. That being said, Does start menu x include a windows 11 default option? Thanks for right click context menu but again, how do I go back to the default context menu if I want to stay in practice? I always recommend people should watch your videos if they want to improve after purchasing Windows 11.
You're welcome
It worked thank u, but my cinebench points are lower at max my cpu is at 95C but only get 17900 points and after I did the settings at 70-85C I only get 16900 points. I’m using 7700x as well
That would not be my way. Mine runs with around 1000 Points more performance compared to stock, boosts 100-200 Mhz higher, consumes about 30W less and has around 7 K lower temps with 150 RPM lower fan speed. CO setting is -25.
And if you don't like tempatures over 80 degrees does not matter. These Ryzens are designt to boost to 95C or Ampere limits. This is how they work and should work.
The Intel Alder and Raptor Lake boost till 100 Degrees.
New times with new concepts.
Also this temperatures are only visible in benchmarks or rendering.or semething like this. In games, they are much lower.
So it isn't really a problem, or only a imagined one.
I'm running a Ryzen 5 7600x. I'm just using a humble Thermalright Peerless Assassin 120SE. Never passes 90C when running Cinebench.
Hey 👋 there, I have a question about changing settings in the BIOS as I’m using the same BIOS as you are with my Asus B650E. Ok, my question is, If I change ANY settings in the “AI Tweaker” section, will it Overrule Any settings I change in the “Advanced” section of the BIOS? Please let me know if you can, I’m tryin to learn here.
Great video. Many thanks. Which is best Intel or Ryzen? 👍👍
Depends really
I have a 7950x, I did this with optimizer curve -40 and PPT 85w and the temp is 48°c in cinebench 2024 and 1722 pts in multicore, idle is 31watts of ppt
You void the warranty by doing that. These settings should have been the stock setting AMD should have apply. But for marketing they push the limits. For the ryzen 8000 series i sm pretty certain they will reduce the temp at stock settings to not force people to void the warranty. Something is not good in the 7000 series to my opinion. First Motherboard on new sructure have always something wrong. If i can recommend, wait the 8000 series and probably new motherboard 770x. This is what i will do. I keep my old x370 and probably will upgrade from 1800x to 5900x upgrade gpu to 5090 then later build a new machine with 8000 v3d cache machine and move the 5090 on it, and put back the 1080ti on the 5900x am4 as second computer
PPT is NOT the temp limit, you're doing it wrong. PPT = TDP, in AMD terms, and it's measured in Watts. So, you're basically limiting your CPU power usage, which is not the right thing to do. Setting the temp limit at 80 or 85C is enough.
I am hoping for The Division 3 or similar, then i am gonna do this undervolting thingy, but for now Ryzen is my editing rig, couse they do this thing.
Kinda like them open world ones, cba with Battlefield or COD.
Fallout titles are more my taste.
I have Intel i5 9400 for older games, works perfectly fine. Think the newer Intel chips have heating issues too ?
Thanks for this video, you literally saved me. Just built a new PC with a 7700x and while playing (Remnant 2) my CPU die average hit a max of 130c on HWinfo. The PC didn't crash, but screen wen't black for like 2-3 secs and the fps dropped from like 130 to 60 fps. Now after doing this my highest temp while playing the game was 85c. Cinebench was around 74c with a score of 19673.
Could you perhaps make a video of why sometimes the screen goes black for like 2-3s but the PC doesn't lag or anything and nothing shuts down, just screen goes black for no reason and turns back on, i wonder if it's something to do with the RAM or just in general AMD CPU's? Before this i've had a PC for 6 years with a 7700k intel and 1080ti. Currently it's a ryzen 7 7700x with 7900 XT GPU
85°C while gaming is insanely hot. I have an overclocked 13900k and my temps never reach more than 60°C while gaming. Are you sure that's the actual temp while gaming and not the temp when compiling shaders or something else? The black screen issue is probably instability in your system. It's either overheating and shutting down or if you followed the steps in this video, your negative offset might be too high. Return everything to stock settings and see if it continues to happen. It's possible that your CPU cooler mount is incorrect and that's why your temps are so high.
Black screen could also be an issue with your HDMI/Display Port cable coming out of your GPU. It could be losing connection momentarily and then reconnecting.
@@jjlw2378 Nah man, my temp was only around 74°c when using cinebench, also i said i got an 7700x CPU, it's temps usually go around 95°c stock. I'm using a tower cooler, not liquid. So the steps from the video helped me. But i will try to use another DP-cable, might fix the black screen, it goes black for 2-3s and comes back, but no stutters or anything it happens randomly not just while gaming. Before i did the steps on this video my CPU reached 130°c on HWinfo. And i noticed the game dropped significantly in performance there. Only happened in "Remnant 2" the game
Great video. Thank you.
Your walkthrough probably didn't update the curve optimizer part because you keep changing the precision boost Overdrive value.
I went on full PBO manual and set up -30 on the 2 preferred cores (noted them in Ryzen master) and -22 on all other cores because full all cores -30 was not full stable. You can also limit downwards vour VDD Core voltage to ease on the CPU (1.20v instead of 1.3v auto) on my silicon piece. Thank's.
On the curve optimiser, you said some people can get away with - 30. When I run ryzen master curve optimiser it sets mine to - 50 after it's 30min test. I get a max boost just shy of 5.5ghz. Is that good? This is my first build since the fx days. I have a 7600x currently.
You helped me make a custom iso of windows 11 to have my programs included with installation . This is a big help for me building multiple PCs .
I got an Asrock 650-e pg itx, can you tell me how to go about this in my bios? Please :/
It's bizarre, my 5900X pulled 235W and never got hotter than 88C. Meanwhile, these 7000 series blast to 95+ with only 145W.. they should have never made the IHS so thicc
My 7800x3D idles around 43-48c when I game it goes up to 63c to 82c is that normal? I haven’t use the steps in this video yet. My gpu stays around 48-54c.. Edit: I tried this and now my pc idles at 34-44 degrees and GPU stays at 34 idle after doing some tweaks to the gpu as well. Now gaming my max is ~50-77 degrees and the clock speed stays at 5GHz in all cores now for some reason! So this is very nice
good temps, nothing to worry about
Nice video but why to mess with PPT? Why not just put the temp limit to what is comfortable with and put CO to where is stable and be done with it?
7800 x3d cooling under an air Assassin 120 cooler E, single fan. On a cool morning such as today 8/3/2024 sits at 47.5 C, a hot afternoon (95) sits at 51.3 C - 55.4 C. Seems normal under air cooled set up.
Great info but does the same settings apply to R9 series?
Yep , this works for both the 5000 and 7000 generations of all ryzen processors
Is there any major performance impact when gaming using this "workaround" ? Cheers
After about 20 years of Intel CPU setups I just built a Ryzen 7700 system and went with AMD for the first time. What can I say .... I'm here troubleshooting my build because CPU is idling at 45 Degrees. For comparison: My old Core I5 6600k was idling at about 20 Degrees. I know this was a special CPU that could even run without any cooler for some time because of the low temp / efficient temp management. But guys we are in 2023, I just don't want my 7 year old CPU be cooler and more efficient that my new one. Especially since I bought it BECAUSE of it's efficiency. Now it looks like my temps might not be normal and you can tweak / workaround / fix that in BIOS. But WHY do I have to do that? Is it that hard to force some sane factory defaults for new AMD CPU's? Why the heck do I have to deal with voltages and tuning params? Is this how AMD is trying to feel more geeky or hardcore by forcing people into BIOS or are they just stupid? AMD may have decent hardware but Software and drivers suck since the very beginning. And now coming back after years it looks like nothing changed. You may argue that this is not AMDs fault but the Mainboard Manufacturer's fault. But I really don't care. Then AMD should talk to MB Vendors and find a way to make it work. Always and out-of-the-box. My Intel based ASUS Boards never needed tweaking. But again, maybe I'm just unlucky this time. I hope it feels more like a good investment after the next days. Anyway thanks for the fix. I'll give it a try
CPU idling at 45 I completely normal. If you are complaining about the efficiency and temperature of the CPU, the modern Intel chips are completely off the scale then. Intel chips are run extremely hot and are very inefficient compared to AMD processors.
Dude, AMD is meant to run at high temperatures. Specially the 7000 series since its TDP is 105w whereas the previous gens and your Intel is 65w. You don't have to go into your bios to fix anything. You can use it as it is but like the video says, he just prefers lower temps. I jumped from Intel to AMD and despite the higher temps (which its supposed to be at), one of the best decisions you could ever make. If temps ever bother you, then AMD isn't for you.
Yeah I don’t know about your results or your method. I think using Ryzen Master with the per core optimization feature and testing is much easier and effective.
Thank you, im running the ryzen 7800x3d with -30 on all cores, processor runs like 3 degrees cooler in cinebench r23 without a problem
You're welcome
Hello what board you using and can you tell me if you have some issues? And whats your temp of cpu in test? I have too 78003xd And dont know how to set it up
@@SoW-CE hi, im using the Asus strix x670e-a Mainboard. Since im utilising Precision Boost Overdrive, the CPU Always goes to ~80°C under heavy load. If you just want stability dont mess with core Offset described in this Video. It is also important to install the latest BIOS update & chipset drivers and then enabling Expo
@@bolamatyp i have latest bios gigabyte b 650 aorus, ryzen 7 7800x3d, And 65 temp max but i played only "The isle evrima" with that so i need test another Games... But i think max GHz core is 4.80.. For me.. IS safe make it to 5.0?
@@SoW-CE my CPU doesnt hit 5ghz even with PBO. I would not advise to overclock the CPU manually, since the 3D-Vcache chips are extremly sensitive to temperature. For Games it doesnt even matter, the 7800x3d is almost entitely bottlenecked in most modern games, squeezing Maximum performance out of it in exchange for stability isnt worth it IMO.