How to Kill Your CPU with "Safe" Voltages

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  • Опубліковано 27 вер 2024

КОМЕНТАРІ • 736

  • @GamersNexus
    @GamersNexus  6 років тому +37

    Article: www.gamersnexus.net/guides/3251-raven-ridge-soc-voltage-guidelines-how-to-kill-cpu-with-safe-voltage
    How to Kill Your Motherboard: ua-cam.com/video/vLMd-5yxTAc/v-deo.html
    What is LLC? ua-cam.com/video/NMIh8dTdJwI/v-deo.html

    • @JubulburbWuldrd
      @JubulburbWuldrd 6 років тому

      So high voltage can be dangerous, and as you name only voltages(and i can see that's pretty universal in pc hardware) i assume what vrms driving soc outputs constant current? If no, why do we care about voltage but not about current?

    • @redhawk3385
      @redhawk3385 6 років тому

      Use the killed cpu as a box opener

    • @isoinebriation5060
      @isoinebriation5060 6 років тому

      @Gamers Nexus So my question was partially answered with the LLC video with buildzoid, but I'm still unsure. The short version is simply, since voltage reporting is mostly highly accurate "estimations", how possible is it that the reported cpuz voltage is higher than the actual voltage, the opposite case of which you're showing here.
      Reason I ask is I have a R7 1700 under Arctic's 240mm aio, and was playing around with the OC seeing how far I could push it. At one point I had cpuz reporting 1.51v and yet prime95 only got the cpu to 75c (this wasn't an everyday clock, I turned it way down since, calm down comment section). Since this performance is much higher than I've expected compared to multiple other reported overclocks, I'm curious if that 1.51v figure reported by cpuz is accurate or not, and by how much.

    • @thefirehawk1495
      @thefirehawk1495 6 років тому +4

      This is a below standard quality from what I've been used to from GN, all I've seen in this video is wild speculation that you may be putting more voltage into your CPU than you actually are without knowing what sensors (and where they're placed and how they work) are reporting what voltages to what software and then comparing that with non-representative measurements taken from the socket (because socket voltages aren't necessarily the same as what actually goes into the CPU due to series resistance and even though one of the probes was actually on a molex and not in the socket. If you had 6v going in and 5v going out of the cpu the cpu would have 1v, but your molex-socket measurement would report 6v, I'm not saying the measurement is necessarily incorrect of gives necessarily incorrect results but it does introduce variables that could be easily removed or controlled for.).

    • @TheJohdu
      @TheJohdu 6 років тому

      very good video. especially after most YT reviews showing their overclocking procedure setting both soc and gfx voltages to 1.35V :-o

  • @aidan4672
    @aidan4672 6 років тому +548

    So... I shouldn't round it up to 2V?

    • @VarietyGamerChannel
      @VarietyGamerChannel 6 років тому +45

      Unless it's a 486, no.

    • @vnyggi621
      @vnyggi621 6 років тому +57

      5v is ok too, just dont go further ;)

    • @kendsplaining
      @kendsplaining 5 років тому +37

      lol 10v is pro gamer mode 😎

    • @theunholybakery1990
      @theunholybakery1990 5 років тому +62

      85v is safe for celerons. They deserve that voltage.

    • @somebody2978
      @somebody2978 5 років тому +59

      Set VCore to 220v in BIOS and will enable FUTURE mode in BIOS. Make sure your CPU has a flux capacitor and a cooler compatible with TDP 1.21 gigawatt.

  • @batmangovno
    @batmangovno 6 років тому +91

    Oh shit *runs to downclock his IntelHD*

    • @Acenis
      @Acenis 6 років тому +1

      FeelsBadMan

    • @TheRguru1
      @TheRguru1 6 років тому +5

      That IntelHD Graphics is going to overpower your monitor and cause it to detonate.

  • @coolcat23
    @coolcat23 6 років тому +140

    The speedometer on my car shows "50" when I'm really driving 75 mph. That's not a fault, just a behaviour.

    • @bizzy156246
      @bizzy156246 3 роки тому +1

      you should buy a new gauge motor or whatever they are called unless its digital then it might be the instrument cluster thats bad

    • @barrymckocinher4649
      @barrymckocinher4649 3 роки тому +9

      @@bizzy156246 I'm pretty sure they were joking...

  • @Qyngali
    @Qyngali 6 років тому +293

    I dare say that the MB manufacturers ARE responsible, they should do everything in their power to tune the boards so they report correct numbers. At the very least make sure that you don't underreport it, that's a recipe for disaster. Which incidentally is why I never recommend Gigabyte to novice builders... Hey Gigabyte, go buy your engineers some multimeters ok? (Well the other guys as well of course...)
    Edit: I was intending to add something but I can't remember what it was. Oh yeah, the state of bios support for the APU's are still quite rough, that the MSI board got non functioning GPU voltage control right now is probably just that. Let's hope they improve on it on current boards and don't gloss over it to push sales of the new chipset boards that are coming...

    • @fartonaut2291
      @fartonaut2291 6 років тому +6

      D Bucky You should be able to expect them to be somewhat accurate.

    • @Dracossaint
      @Dracossaint 6 років тому +6

      Fartonaut resistance varys from board to chip though even. So getting it exactly accurate or llc perfectly on the nose would add significant cost due to the fact it would take a hardware monitor similar to volt metter except it's inlined with Internal wiring which ya also would have to either run it to a standout point and hope a user would properly ground it to the standoff when they install it in a case or have two wires coming off it. One to be taped on where ya wanna get x voltage reading and one for ground via molex or some other way. This will not work and adds extra cables. It's best to just use a volt metter and take off the side panel of your case. Easy peasy, what they should do is clarify such things as Steve has mentioned since overclocking seems to be championed (I'm unsure if that's too dramatic or not?)

    • @KenS1267
      @KenS1267 6 років тому +4

      That's simply absurd. You're basically asking that every MoBo have a high accuracy voltmeter built in. Go price such. Would you be willing to pay that premium on every MoBo? They use reasonably accurate techniques that are sufficient for 99% of end users needs. If you need more accurate readings then get a good voltmeter and take direct readings.

    • @leexgx
      @leexgx 6 років тому +7

      They should be more or less be around the correct voltage (most are what +/- 5%) not 0.1v higher then what you entered

    • @RyuFelinshire
      @RyuFelinshire 6 років тому +8

      Except... the motherboard is reporting the correct voltages... the CPU isn't. You can see it in the video if you're familiar with the sensors on HWinfo64. The motherboard VCORE SOC sensor, which is cut off to read VCORE... is showing the correct voltages.

  • @cozacmihai
    @cozacmihai 3 роки тому +8

    You should take the mainboard ground as negative reference, not the power supply cable. There is a voltage drop across the power cables so the voltage read will be higher than actual Vcore voltage. Or even better measure directly on a capacitor of the respective voltage.

    • @soundspark
      @soundspark 8 місяців тому

      Excellent point. When I was trying to scope out my motherboard I did clip the ground to a grounded piece of metal on the motherboard, but I was only checking the outputs of the VRMs for stability.

  • @paskowitz
    @paskowitz 6 років тому +42

    This is why I like top ROG boards. Voltage contacts on the front of the board and cleaner/more consistent power delivery. It would be interesting to see a board like the Apex and the most basic Z370 board. It would be interesting to add this metric to mobo reviews.
    Although, this doesn't really matter for discrete GPUs since all modern ones are voltage capped and don't perform better with higher voltage since clocks depend more on temps.

    • @ReanuKeevesAus
      @ReanuKeevesAus 6 років тому

      paskowitz when I built my Ryzen build around cyber Monday deals last year the reasons you stated about Asus ROG boards is why I went with the Asus ROG X370 Hero board. Before that build all the ROG components I had or used in builds for friends and family were absolute beasts and were parts I could rely on!!

    • @snoitseuqpi1119
      @snoitseuqpi1119 6 років тому

      I must say, the Z270 Maximus IX Apex is the best. So excessive for sure, but also for what it was built for, I don't think it can be beat. I also have the z270e strix board, and to be fair, if you want to OC, the heat sinks are decent on the VRM, and the VRM works great, with most of the options that other ROG boards have.

    • @BLOEDVLEK
      @BLOEDVLEK 6 років тому

      Yeah I love my ROG RVE10 and I'll always buy high end ROG boards for all my builds, the only thing to be careful of is that you make sure you go in an manually set ALL voltages as on the auto settings ESPECIALLY with x.m.p enabled, these boards do push a lot of voltage and there are lots of reports of these auto setttings killing cpus.

  • @kaos.
    @kaos. 6 років тому +10

    This is the kind of video you would expect to see on a enthusiast/technical channel. But only Gamers Nexus does it.
    Thank you Steve! ♥

  • @JP_Stone
    @JP_Stone 5 років тому +12

    Yea almost kill my CPU until I was informed about this. Running my 2700X at what I thought was 1.75V but the MoBo was actually pushing closer to 1.4V. Realized I had followed bad advice and 1.25V (which is pushing closer to 1.35V) is enough voltage to sustain a stable 4.2GHz overclock. To many people in forums and online in general recommend just whacking up the voltage to "stabilize" your overclock.

  • @SaccoBelmonte
    @SaccoBelmonte 6 років тому +35

    I've been taking CPU vcore measurements out of the socket since Ryzen launched (Prime X370 Pro)
    While they vary compared to HWinfo some say that there could be a drop from the back of the socket to the actual die. So things have to be taken with a grain of salt.
    I generally recommend not to go over 1.425v for a Ryzen chip. SOC never over 1.25 and generally is better low (here is at 0.975v)
    If you wanna do a truly helpful video grab an oscilloscope and try to find peaks at LLC4 / LLC5. There is a huge debate around Ryzen about this.

    • @SaccoBelmonte
      @SaccoBelmonte 6 років тому

      There is a debate whether LLC4 and LLC5 are harmful or not and to determine that we need to know if there are peaks while transitioning from load to idle. So far only one person measured and found no peaks but we need a definite confirmation. For that Gamers Nexus needs a high quality oscilloscope. (maybe rented)
      I'm on a 1800x at 4.05Ghz 1.418v vcore LLC4, 0.975 v SOC LLC30

    • @berni8k
      @berni8k 6 років тому +6

      If the peaks are short enough to need a good oscilloscope to see it (I take it >100MHz) then they don't matter because there are extra caps on the CPU package that can clean up blips in voltage that brief.
      The problem is that he is stabling the black lead of the multimeter into the PSU, this adds the voltage drop of the PSU cables in and throws off the reading by as much as over 100mV. Doing that is fine for testing if your 12V rail drops. But its NOT fine when you are mesuring voltages so tiny.

    • @gillianseed4419
      @gillianseed4419 6 років тому +2

      yeah, you really need to sense ground near the cpu, preferably on the other side of the cap
      when there are triple digit amps flowing milliohms matters

  • @berni8k
    @berni8k 6 років тому +85

    That is not the right way to measure the core voltage !!!
    You are not only measuring the core voltage but also adding in all the voltage drop on the cables from the motherboard to the PSU. Might not sound like much but there is easily 20A flowing back trough the ground cables (12V 5V 3.3V rails combined) and there can be easily 0.01 Ohm of resistance in the cables this can cause an extra 0.2V to appear (Amps*Ohms=Volts)
    The correct way to do it is to touch the other multimeter lead to a grounded pin ON the actual motherboard, ideally touch it to the other side of the capacitor you are measuring.
    If you repeat your measurements like that you will see a difference.

    • @thequantaleaper
      @thequantaleaper 5 років тому +5

      Agreed. And also, the recommendations are surely based on the board's own measured values, not externally measured values on a multimeter.
      I'd have to see long term failure rates to determine if these risks are accurate.

    • @vidiveniviciDCLXVI
      @vidiveniviciDCLXVI 4 роки тому +2

      @@thequantaleaper Yeah this way of measuring didn't sit right with me either. Plus the guidelines are there and they take everything into account.

    • @happygimp0
      @happygimp0 4 роки тому +3

      The correct way is to connect the power inside the CPU to two unused pins (has to be done by AMD), which don't draw any significant current,

    • @tcclaviger
      @tcclaviger 4 роки тому

      Absolutely right, thanks Asus for the probe points that do it right!
      In regard to the comment by Casey Goode, the voltages quoted are ABSOLUTE voltages, not "read by software or MB", absolute. The meaning is not ambiguous, the chip manufacturer cannot account for the different MB constructors voltages, they can only quote what their own equipment will take.
      If you have a board that delivers 200 mV over target, well, take it up with the MB manufacturer.
      What is FAR more important... over/under shoot. How far over and how far under will do serious damage over time.

    • @josepholsen9831
      @josepholsen9831 4 роки тому

      berni8k You’re right. With those low voltages every little bit added counts. Wondering if he has a BSEE. Nothing against him if he doesn’t. Just want to see what passes for engineering these days.

  • @keithberwanger6595
    @keithberwanger6595 6 років тому +84

    Next up: how to kill the GPU you are going to sell used to someone after block chain mining becomes obsolete. FT bitcoin and 95+ efficiency.

    • @keithberwanger6595
      @keithberwanger6595 6 років тому +10

      To be fair, you kill power components on the card before the GPU dies, but it's a joke so I'm sorry

    • @gen-X-trader
      @gen-X-trader 6 років тому

      what will make it obsolete?

    • @keithberwanger6595
      @keithberwanger6595 6 років тому +2

      Kyle Van small scale mining operations fronted by individuals will die out once cryptocurrency and blockchain become so widely accepted that "casual" individuals will be using it. Once the general populations begin using something scams become more widespread and soon enough federal regulations are placed upon it. Regulations that can track usage of coin and will eventually find a way to track individual transactions then the big original advocates of it drop off and then it becomes an everyday kind of thing that is no longer feasibly "mined" on a GPU array due to exponential growth, taxation, and regulation.
      Blockchain and cryptocurrency are logical evolutions, with evolution come changes.

    • @gen-X-trader
      @gen-X-trader 6 років тому +2

      Keith Berwanger you seriously think that's happening in the next few months? I have a hard time visualizing major changes before the next halving. No one really cares what's going to happen in 2025. People are going to be buying things based on this year. Bitmain owns such a crazy amount of crypto they by themselves can fluctuate the market and accelerate or reduce demand. I don't honestly understand why so many miners are frothy over the video cards anyway. You can get the T9 and S9 all day long and you don't have to worry about multiple motherboards or PC setups to run video cards

    • @keithberwanger6595
      @keithberwanger6595 6 років тому +4

      I don't /seriously/ project anything happening. I do /seriously/ think anything can happen with such a volatile concept. I won't pretend to know the nuances of it all, but anything that can grow exponentially can mutate exponentially.

  • @kuhrd
    @kuhrd 4 роки тому +1

    One thing that I would point out just for new users to also understand is that the meter they use could also be several % off from what it is reading/displaying and that accuracy varies by range. An inexpensive hardware store meter could be out as much as half a volt or possibly more. This is especially common for cheap meters that cost less than $250-500 US and don't come with a lab calibration sticker or statement of calibration from an independent lab. The lowest precision lab calibrated meter I would consider using for overclocking would have a 4.5 digit display and 20K counts but a 5.5 digit display and 200K counts would still be a better option for seeing problematic voltage variations during operation.

  • @johncaccioppo1142
    @johncaccioppo1142 4 роки тому +1

    Had a mild yet annoying audio stuttering problem with my new Lenovo, the support team tried to help but couldn't, however we did find in the user forums some discussions that led me to conclude the problem might be an undersized power supply, 400w not nearly enough for a gaming desktop. (No wonder it was such a bargain!)
    What made this more credible is that I read numerous solutions from people that only occasionally worked. When I disabled my WLAN I found the audio stutter I was fighting diminished by about 90% further making me conclude that this is a power issue.

  • @trahim2
    @trahim2 6 років тому +19

    Where you measure these voltages is imperative. There are resistive losses between the voltage source and the device being powered. I believe the reading in hwinfo is coming from the ADCs on the cpu itself. Therefore it's getting a more accurate reading of voltage that arrives at the silicon. This is why all the hwinfo voltage readings are lower than what your meter is reporting. There's lots of variables that affect measurement, but the main issue is the difficulty in accurately measuring voltages in the millivolt range.

    • @GamersNexus
      @GamersNexus  6 років тому +5

      trahim2 That was the entire point of the content, yes.

    • @trahim2
      @trahim2 6 років тому

      Gamers Nexus hah, you're right. I didn't watch the video all the way through. Gamers get this stuff wrong so often that I just assumed you weren't aware of these factors. You've done your research. You're no Linus. ;)

    • @AngryChineseWoman
      @AngryChineseWoman 6 років тому +2

      trahim2 So basically hwinfo's reading is accurate ? That's a relief

    • @Cafe_TTV
      @Cafe_TTV 6 років тому +1

      trahim2 He's not Linus

  • @YuRaLL
    @YuRaLL 6 років тому +48

    euhm. the correct voltages the mobo puts out are in the motherboard section of HWinfo (it shows 1.2 when you first pointed it out at CPU VCORE SOC.)
    the CPU shows lower numbers because of internal resistance I reckon. so that just shows the vdroop between what the MOBO delivers and what is actually used by the chip.

    • @ludoflame
      @ludoflame 6 років тому

      noticed that too

    • @derx6666
      @derx6666 6 років тому +2

      Indeed, saw it too. Strange that Steve didn't notice this.

    • @MuttleyGriffin
      @MuttleyGriffin 6 років тому

      So when monitoring that SOC on my Ryzen 1700 is at max 1.2v, I'm correct at looking at the "CPU VCORE SOC" under mobo readings in HWInfo? This video made me second guess myself by checking the CPU readings of "SoC Voltage (SVI2 TFN)" which reads at 1.09v.

    • @ludoflame
      @ludoflame 6 років тому

      for good or for bad my mobo(gigabyte ab350 gaming 3) shows both sensors at around the same voltage with differences around 0.05 volts

    • @MuttleyGriffin
      @MuttleyGriffin 6 років тому

      I have the Gigabyte AB350M Gaming 3 (the mATX variant of your mobo). My avg voltage difference between the two is around the same at 0.048v, and max voltage differences 0.094v. Granted not a lot, but to certain users, could be enough between sweet spot and degradation.

  • @jcoc8877
    @jcoc8877 6 років тому +1

    As an XOCer myself. This was a good watch. Lots of good info here.

  • @opoxious1592
    @opoxious1592 3 роки тому +2

    I have my i7 990x overclocked to 4.62Ghz at 1.448 volts, for over more than 10 years.
    Still runs like a charm.

    • @ParallaxEffect
      @ParallaxEffect 2 роки тому

      He says a lot of things but I waited and waited to hear data or even an explanation about why high voltage actually kills a chip and.. like every other neckbeard, thats where the details get suspiciously thin.

  • @WestCoastMole
    @WestCoastMole 6 років тому +1

    Excellent Video Steve. You illustrate clearly why Overclockers should not trust the voltage readings that come from Software Apps. The excessive fluctuations in the A-to-D converters used in the hardware on the board. I know I would like to see, at the very least, a standard adopted where all Mobo Manufacturers supply overclocking motherboards with the SOC Voltage and Ground brought to a clearly labeled Hard Post on the top side of the board. In addition the more diligent manufacturer should supply a precision Reference Standard set to the CPU Manufacturers "never go above" SOC Voltage. Good quality DMMs run anywhere from 80 to 200 bucks. That isn't a great deal of extra money to spend considering the user will only have to do it once.

  • @TheGuruStud
    @TheGuruStud 6 років тому

    No one is doing these kinds of vids! You guys deserve FAR more credit.

  • @dm223
    @dm223 6 років тому +1

    awesome work, addressing the real issues of overclocking.

  • @d3c0deFPV
    @d3c0deFPV 6 років тому

    I know the input values aren't exact, but I didn't expect this much of a difference. Interesting insight, thanks Steve!

  • @Bakamanzz
    @Bakamanzz 6 років тому

    This is some fantastic content, this will be coming in handy today as my Apu just arrived pretty crazy the differences between software and the actual reading did not expect that huge of a jump but will keep that in mind going forward thanks guys!

  • @jc265
    @jc265 6 років тому +69

    How to kill your CPU, aka how to take advantage of Micro Center's in-store replacement plan and get an upgrade every year or two.

    • @akalion213
      @akalion213 6 років тому +2

      OC voids the warranty though

    • @jc265
      @jc265 6 років тому +25

      Akalion Manufacturers warranty, sure. But Micro Center's in store replacement plan isn't the same as the manufacturer warranty.

    • @vnyggi621
      @vnyggi621 6 років тому +3

      Hodor they cant tell that its been overclocked anyways

    • @alien_man1669
      @alien_man1669 6 років тому +5

      Haha thats exactly what i just did to my asshat *cough* asus cheap prime b350 plus with my ryzen 7 1700 and my friend accidently let ryzen master kill his tomahawk ab350 pro with ryzen 1700 so we have to do it again. And just shoot the shit with them and dont say you overclocked it. If anything blame a bios update for changing voltage lulz

    • @harunmeta2258
      @harunmeta2258 4 роки тому

      @RectalDiscourse thank you

  • @mattsmechanicalssi5833
    @mattsmechanicalssi5833 6 років тому

    Great stuff as usual, Steve! You have to be THE MOST TRUSTWORTHY GUY ON THE NET. Your level of information far outstrips most people out there. Your dedicated, and accurate, and you have great hair!
    Keep up the great work,
    Matt

  • @joshuagomez3600
    @joshuagomez3600 2 роки тому +2

    Great job gettin in on the details. Interesting the variance between manufacturers and from different measurement points.. I can't help but wonder if there is some sort of unspoken industry standard, or if they really just sort of all do their own thing. Kinda makes you wonder which voltage is really the important one, because even if you are seeing a certain voltage on the fet if there is loss on the way to the sensitive component then I would think that the loss would have to be kept in consideration and compensated for.. But it seems like they all act so differently its almost impossible to say..

  • @kasimirdenhertog3516
    @kasimirdenhertog3516 4 роки тому +1

    I remember casually setting 5V on a CPU that’s designed for 3.3V, just because the BIOS didn’t support more options. How far we’ve come! 👨🏻‍🦳

  • @justinsugay1149
    @justinsugay1149 2 роки тому

    In general, other than getting a higher benchmarking score it's usually not worth the extra voltage or higher frequency to run your components at and the cooler the better as long as it's not affecting your overall experience using the computer. I try to run my computer as quiet and as cool as possible I do test out how hard and far and extreme I can get it but for 24/7 use my realistic settings are much more conservative. This whole video definitely confirms my ideology when it comes to building and running one's PC for benchmarking versus daily use. As always Steve, great work!

    • @HellGatefr2
      @HellGatefr2 Рік тому

      Video is a bit old, modern CPUs seem more robust, and you will notice they can run at very high voltages stock

  • @VarietyGamerChannel
    @VarietyGamerChannel 6 років тому +6

    Good old 80486 handles 3.6v.

  • @chrcoluk
    @chrcoluk 6 років тому

    Not surprised this is happening, many people on forums have been advising me to run 1.4v as 24/7 use on my new coffee lake, and you got specialist companies selling pre binned chips that are rated at really high voltages like 1.37-1.42v which is crazy for daily use.
    Even worse when you consider that chips actual voltage tends to be higher than whats set in bios and what software tools report.
    There seems to be a big misconception that as long as you can cool a high volted chip then its all good, as if only heat kills cpus.

  • @Sre0508
    @Sre0508 4 роки тому

    I think you are looking at the wrong number. There is a stat for CPU VCORE SOC down there, which I think measure from the board instead of the CPU. It gave a better read and closer to the real voltage

  • @GurtTarctor
    @GurtTarctor 6 років тому

    Ok then, now I need to look up how to measure voltage from the back of the board. GN the best tech channel on UA-cam strikes again!

  • @Poofu
    @Poofu 6 років тому

    one thing to point out is due to the distance between that molex gnd and the vcore pin the value could be slightly off due to the molex gnd not actually being 0V

  • @HappyBeezerStudios
    @HappyBeezerStudios 6 років тому

    Reminds me of my old P35 board where I went with a pencil mod to counter the immense VDroop woth a quad.
    Still find it crazy when people put something like 1.35-1.4v onto recent chips.
    That was considered high to threshold 10 years ago and todays chips are manufactured way smaller.

  • @ThisRandomUsername
    @ThisRandomUsername 6 років тому

    I haven't watched the whole video yet, but by using a disconnected Molex ground line as the reference, you're adding in the voltage droop across the other ground lines that are connected to the board which are carrying some current.
    This happens because every wire has some resistance, and there's current passing through them to get to power supply ground, so they generate a voltage. V = I * R. This won't be much (probably less than 1/10 of a volt), but it can add to it.
    If you want to measure more accurately you should probe as close to the CPU as possible.

  • @brovid-19
    @brovid-19 3 роки тому

    Shit.. and now I gotta use my multimeter to overclock. . and it's covered by the mounting bracket. This makes me so confident

  • @LudwigvanBeethoven2
    @LudwigvanBeethoven2 5 років тому +2

    Cant they put an integrated multimeter for critical parts? I would like to know the physical reason about this difference, why motherboard cant read nor write correct voltages.

  • @forkbomb_
    @forkbomb_ 6 років тому +8

    Steve really seems to be into killing hardware, or at least making them suffer! 🤔

  • @jakegarrett8109
    @jakegarrett8109 6 років тому +1

    Thank you so much for making this video Steve! I've been telling my cousin for over a year now, don't trust the software, its usually not accurate. So many people believe it like its written in stone, even the impossible (like sub-ambient temps on FX, just physically impossible), while I'm laughing at the 1 million volts on one of my GPUs show. Always check with a multi-meter to know for sure, never assume what you type is accurate with what happens. Great video Steve, keep up the awesome work!

    • @astilen5647
      @astilen5647 6 років тому

      The HWiNFO64 software is accurate, this video proves that. Steve used a digital multymeter to cross check and validate the readings. Fo example if you set your OC software at ~1.1 volts, check the HWiNFO64 motherboard section to see if the voltage on those components exceeds the safety numbers the manufacturer provided

    • @jakegarrett8109
      @jakegarrett8109 6 років тому

      Ok, so 1 million volts was correct... And 8c CPU in a 20c room is also correct. And even though I measured with a multi-meter, and it showed Vdroop of 0.01v, software was showing 0.1v (order of magnitude different), as well as 1.3v instead of 1.55v like I typed and was reading with DMM, then you're saying software was right the whole time? Mind blown! I just invented a CPU that runs cooler than its surroundings (so it must be absorbing thermal energy, and creating electricity), while capable of mining. I just solved global warming and mining at the same time! Where do I sign up for my Nobel Peace prize?

    • @astilen5647
      @astilen5647 6 років тому

      Calm your t its

    • @jakegarrett8109
      @jakegarrett8109 6 років тому

      But how can I? I just invented something better than perpetual motion! I'm off to save the world, providing energy for 3rd world countries, Hash power for miners, and solving global warming. Its a miracle!

    • @astilen5647
      @astilen5647 6 років тому

      Stahp

  • @merrychristmas3213
    @merrychristmas3213 5 років тому +2

    My 1800x consistently peaks at 1.55V at stock settings.. Whelp

  • @MyD69
    @MyD69 6 років тому

    Thanks for existing. Keep up the great work!

  • @dazeen9591
    @dazeen9591 Рік тому +1

    Both AMD and Intel CPUs state 1.35 V +5% (1.417 V... or something) is safe voltage.

  • @Drinnan
    @Drinnan 5 років тому

    Although I've since owned a q6600 and 6700k, my first self built pc was an AMD Athlon XP 3200+ @2.2ghz. back then I didn't know how to overclock and I never did in the time I owned that but when I bought my q6600 and sold the AMD to a friend, he fried it within 2 weeks, just ramping up voltages because I told him how good the q6600 was. I kinda wish I kept it for sentimental value

  • @aleksankazakov
    @aleksankazakov 5 років тому +1

    I am sure if the manufacturer says 1.3v is safe they factor this in already.

  • @johnlacquey7240
    @johnlacquey7240 6 років тому +3

    What is to keep me from soldering on lead to the SOC, another to ground, and keeping a cheap multimeter on full time while OCing?

  • @VampirkoOrus
    @VampirkoOrus 6 років тому +4

    What about a voltage drop on a path from cpu to ground? I don't know how much resistance in between them, but they may affect your results. Could you find a pin that located at exiting current from cpu and make your results a more precise? Ah, and also voltage drop from resistance of a socket.

    • @bozoc2572
      @bozoc2572 2 роки тому

      Indeed, this is how not to measure Voltage

  • @Michael_NL
    @Michael_NL 5 років тому +3

    Can you do a video on transient voltage spikes when using high LLC? For the new z390 gigabyte boards there is no know info about how much the voltage spikes when coming off load with high LLC. Im running 1.345V on my 8086K for 5.1 Ghz, but I am afraid that my voltage will spike +0.200mv to 1.645 for a millisecond when coming off load. That will slowly kill my cpu in a year.

  • @BornaPrpic
    @BornaPrpic 6 років тому

    Great video. I've got an Asus B350-I with an 1700 in a Phanteks Shift case (gonna need to print a top extraction fan mount at one point). After seeing the thermals on the board. I'm sticking to 3.75 even with a 120 Coolermaster AiO. Higher I could probably put it horizontal and grill sausages. Thankfully it's only purpose is for HTPC and as a rendering slave for v-ray distributed when needed (cheaper to have a few 1700 than less Threadripper systems). Next up is a 1700 NAS system hahaha.
    Can't wait for kill the board series. I need a video so I can shut up and just show people :P

  • @b28uby
    @b28uby 6 років тому

    @Gamer Nexus if you look at cpu core voltage, it is a correlation between it and the one that you modify in amd master and what you measure.

  • @reedytrippleseven4786
    @reedytrippleseven4786 4 роки тому

    I put 1.45v (ASUS maximus V extreme Bios)through a 2600k and ran it @5.1ghz 24/7 on my main rig for over 5 years With a maximum Core Temperature of 60°c(realtemp) without issue at which point I sold the rig on to one very happy camper. I think a key point you are missing here is that a "Safe voltage" can only be given in conjunction with operating temperature and intended life cycle. by "Safe" I mean CPU will maintain OC performance as well as stock operation for the entirety of its useful life ~ 6years IMHO. As I understand it degradation is a wear rate and occurs regardless but is accelerated by increased voltage and temperature. In any event I intend to push similarly high voltage through my 3700x @ a max 60°c core. And would be interested in collaborating to help to establish a degradation curve for the following individual factors.
    "Voltage"
    "temperature"
    "Node Size in nm" Conventional wisdom would suggest die shrinks are more susceptible to degradation as its a Physical Erosion caused by Electromigration
    In other words do you want to roast some 3700x's like chestnuts in time for Christmas it will be fun and it will benefit the community

  • @dieseldiesel9292
    @dieseldiesel9292 5 років тому +2

    Decided to oc my 3770k and set my voltage to 1.2v. Little did I know it was voltage offset and It ended up maxing the voltage out at 1.8v.

    • @hugo9016
      @hugo9016 4 роки тому

      What is voltage offset?

  • @hawkshot2001
    @hawkshot2001 6 років тому +30

    You really should connect ground on the board and not through the PSU. Technically they are the same, but that wire length is going to make the readings off.

    • @GamersNexus
      @GamersNexus  6 років тому +16

      hawkshot2001 Max 20mv, same idea and same concepts apply.

    • @ActuallyHardcoreOverclocking
      @ActuallyHardcoreOverclocking 6 років тому +21

      I told steve not to bother since it generally doesn't make that much difference(10s of mv at most).

    • @littlerhino2006
      @littlerhino2006 6 років тому

      Yeah the voltage drop between the CPU socket and the power supply might account for the discrepancy between HWinfo and their measurements

    • @GamersNexus
      @GamersNexus  6 років тому +8

      No. No it does not. Read the reply we already posted to this thread.

  • @snekbaev
    @snekbaev 6 років тому +2

    Is it just me or the measured voltages correspond to the "CPU VCORE" (not Vcore) entry in HWiNFO64?

  • @NAmania
    @NAmania 6 років тому +2

    What about VCORE hwinfo readings?Are they accurate?

  • @RyuFelinshire
    @RyuFelinshire 6 років тому

    So, as someone who has a B350 Gigabyte Ryzen board. I always read off the Motherboard's reported VCORE SOC voltage in HWinfo64. Which you have set to obscure the SoC denomination in your sensors bar. It's always a lot different than the CPU reported. But it's being fairly close to what you're measuring on the back. THIS is something I wish you'd talk about more. It's something I always warn people on the subreddit on the B350 Gigabyte boards. Read the motherboard's voltage, not the CPU's voltage, because the offsets in BIOS will also stack on top of the voltage you set in Ryzen Master.
    Basically: You should note you're reading the CPU reports, and not the motherboard reports. The motherboard here is actually reporting the correct voltage on that gigabyte board.

  • @kybiras1
    @kybiras1 6 років тому

    i ran an 2010 i7 870 on a entry level Gigabyte board without any heatsinks and lowend VRMs/ power phases. It took me around 1 year to blow that board with 4.1 Ghz. Not bad I say !!

  • @geraldalonso8232
    @geraldalonso8232 6 років тому

    Very good video as usual. I would have liked to see results from a good multimiter.....

  • @GrulbGL
    @GrulbGL 6 років тому

    dude, that was insanely important! i need to make sure the voltage of my cpu (currently a fx8320 at 1.39) if that was really 1.39.

  • @Kasyo
    @Kasyo 5 років тому

    Im Running my I5 8600k on 5.1Ghz 4500Mhz on my Cache @ 1.440v. Let´s see what happens in 1 Year or 1 and a Half.... (Cpu is Delidded Stable @ 80-85°C @ 30minute stress testing depending on the room Temperature) In Gaming it wont go further then 65-70°C. Im using a Broken Eco cooler..... Motherboard is a MSI Z370-A-Pro With the latest Bios (MS-7B48) Maybe another Mainboard will give me lowervoltage on the same settings. But it is not worth an 160€ upgrade.... My Old FX8350 runned stable @ 5Ghz with 1.45v for over 1 and a half Years. And it is still working.

  • @CHAOSMOVEMENT
    @CHAOSMOVEMENT 3 роки тому

    Thanks for the warning. I double checked my Asus Crosshair VIII Hero,
    and my manual OC at 1.225v is 100% on point using a multimeter.

  • @anonamouse5917
    @anonamouse5917 6 років тому

    Very informative !!
    Thanks for this.

  • @dani132455
    @dani132455 6 років тому

    I think this is something the MOBO manufacturers are responsible for and should be on top of. If people can't rely on the information they get from their MOBO they can make a lot more damaging mistakes which i would say are out of their control. Of cause their will probably be some margin of error but if it can be the difference between a safe and definitely unsafe voltage the difference is simply too big also if you are gonna have a "big" difference at least be on the safe side specifically referring to Gigabyte.

  • @hpcarlos2255
    @hpcarlos2255 3 роки тому +1

    My Msi Mpg x570 Atx gaming plus when left at auto pumps Over 1.4v while my Ryzen 7 3700x runs at Stock 🧐 i manually set it to 1.35v and use Ryzen master to OverClock my Chip to 4.4ghz @ 1.35v = Stable on 90% of my Triple A games 🤔 A C Odyssey seems to Crash after 1 hour of gameplay ...... any Recommendations are appropriate & Ty 🇵🇹

  • @bthjf12003
    @bthjf12003 4 місяці тому

    6 years later .... Intel doing the same with Raptor lake but Steve look identical

  • @smokeydops
    @smokeydops 6 років тому

    I uhh... I'm pretty sure people are missing the point of this video. But so am I.
    GN is talking about what people recommend as a safe voltage. What does it mean? This isn't commonly communicated as where its measured, just what the voltage is. Which doesn't really tell you anything.
    All the same, I do not think that the voltage readout on the back of the board has anything to do with components past the socket. Those parts report their voltage via software, and should always do so accurately.
    But of course I am wrong, as voltage droop across the socket is extra heat generated. This is something to consider, as voltage is only one of two factors in lethality. _But its quite easy to check core temps_
    The other X-factor are VRM temps, which are going to go up according not to what the socket uses, but to what the VRM puts into the socket.
    Why worry about this at all? GN I think you need to explain how the CPU can incorrectly report its operating voltage, or if it isn't doing that, why is this dangerous?

  • @ZZstaff
    @ZZstaff 6 років тому

    Somehow I missed this video. I have i7 7700K with a Gigabyte Z270X-UD5 motherboard and have the Vcore set at 1.235 and onboard graphics set to 0.600v. I do not use the IGP, I have a MSI 980Ti Lightning. These voltages seem to be fine as I have had this build for just under 1 1/2 years.

  • @savage_rishabh2255
    @savage_rishabh2255 3 роки тому

    me: thanks god to give me a intel pentium cpu
    him: killing cpus to death
    lol xd

  • @auto9894
    @auto9894 6 років тому +1

    Does this apply to ram? My ram is currently running at 1.35 volts. Could it be actually running higher...say 1.45 volts? Hope not...

  • @astilen5647
    @astilen5647 6 років тому

    Learned a lot, thx GN!

  • @stanomx
    @stanomx 4 роки тому

    Isn't there a considerable vdrop on that molex ground vs. ground near the cpu? I will answer, yes it is. You should check that whats the difference. Also what is your multimeter tolerance? It looks like 0,05% accuracy which in 2 volt meassurment means 0,1V. After what I've seen, I think that readings are way off.

  • @garrettbillian6340
    @garrettbillian6340 6 років тому

    Shouldn't it be pretty obvious that the reading on the back of the board won't make it all the way to the cpu? Seems like an interesting experiment and discussion point that could use some clarity from manufacturers, but not something to get people to think the sky is falling.

  • @Onionjack77
    @Onionjack77 4 роки тому

    And when was the multimeter calibrated?

  • @ChoppedAndScrewedMusic
    @ChoppedAndScrewedMusic 2 роки тому

    I keep mine at 1.35 - 1.37
    Hits 80C° on XTU Benchmark
    I Run It All Day, No Issue.
    Stays Below 50C° with My Average Use

  • @Protegit
    @Protegit 4 роки тому

    What does SoC refer to in non-integrated graphics CPUs such as Ryzen 3900x?

    • @Taikon_n
      @Taikon_n 4 роки тому

      memory controller voltage

  • @joshsanderson5512
    @joshsanderson5512 5 років тому

    So this could mean the silicon lottery is essentially pointless because a cpu could be “doing” 5ghz all cores 1.2v but the boards pushing like 1.3 and without testing it you do not know

  • @NativeWarrior081
    @NativeWarrior081 6 років тому +1

    Is i7 8700K @ 5.1GHz 1.36v a good overclock?

  • @ShovelShovel
    @ShovelShovel 6 років тому +1

    keyboard light flickering must be because of the frequency of the lights and the camera

  • @shuttlecommander
    @shuttlecommander 3 роки тому

    I noticed my asus tuf gaming z390 board is always 1 millivolt lower than actuall typed in number.

  • @blaine244
    @blaine244 6 років тому

    so does that mean 1.35V on my 1800X at 3.8 is too high with a gigabyte gaming 5 X370 with a Noctua NH-D15 ?

  • @v1asec
    @v1asec 6 років тому

    Thank you Steve, you are doing a great job at explaining things. I watched your video in a discord channel and had to go to the browser so I could upvote. Currently I'm not doing any OC except for XMP on RAM. I pushed 1.36V in BIOS to make it more stable. I even had to push 1.38V on a friend's rig because it only POSTed at 1.36V, but it could still be unstable. I hope it is "safe".

  • @TheArakan94
    @TheArakan94 6 років тому

    Any proof for the degrading? Just because you measure 1.35V on socket, doesn't mean that there is same voltage in the DRAM controller. I'd personally trust internal sensors over external measurement.

  • @happygimp0
    @happygimp0 4 роки тому

    You need a oscilloscope. VRMs generate ripple and you can't see that with a DMM.

  • @ChilledfishStick
    @ChilledfishStick 3 роки тому

    It's not okay to give the user false sensor readings and expect them to know that it's very inaccurate. Why would anyone who hasn't specifically heard that there could be a discrepancy have any reason to believe that the numbers aren't accurate?
    If it's a known issue for Gigabyte to show lower numbers, then it's on them to fix it. What good it sensor data if it's no accurate? No sensor data at all would be better.

  • @kinghados
    @kinghados 5 років тому +1

    My CPU has been really mean and opening itself to massive security flaws, so I guess it time to kill it

  • @Zigglegarf
    @Zigglegarf 6 років тому

    So, what you're saying is that you're better off guessing the voltage than trusting software measurements?

  • @retroman2884
    @retroman2884 4 роки тому

    I don't doubt that there are differences between the voltage reading in the settings and the "actual" voltage. But I doubt whether the voltage meter is calibrated or not, and when this was done.

  • @Flyinghotpocket
    @Flyinghotpocket 6 років тому

    This is why you guys should do future benchmarks only taking into consideration stock shit. not OC

    • @GamersNexus
      @GamersNexus  6 років тому

      ... we always do that?

    • @Flyinghotpocket
      @Flyinghotpocket 6 років тому

      ONLY stock. not oc. you compare everything to OC. its not guaranteed as you said.

  • @Fuzzfrrek
    @Fuzzfrrek 6 років тому +1

    Back in the Piii era, 1.66V was a thing...

  • @Bourinos02
    @Bourinos02 6 років тому +1

    Is this behaviour observed on Intel as well? (and for any APU/CPU?)

  • @timorouw5555
    @timorouw5555 4 роки тому

    Soooo running my ryzen 3 1300x at 3.9Ghz at 1.4 volts isn't good?

  • @badsherlockian2062
    @badsherlockian2062 6 років тому

    Did you know that the Ryzen 5 1600Xs sometimes report more than 1.5V while using stock settings? Probably to maintain that pretty high (for Ryzen at least) overclock. Still, it's absolutely insane... I actually had to manually "tune" my 1600X to a lower voltage (1.275) and I also set the frequency to a fixed 3.9Ghz. This should be much more future-proof, I hope. ;-) If you have a 1600X or know anyone who does, you should probably tell them about this issue...

  •  3 роки тому

    so for every person it's different?
    i got a x570 ultra Aorus and Amd 3700x,
    u got a save volt for me? were can i put it on to get most out of my 3700x, without breaking it ?
    what can i change in bios? i dont use ryzen master software. don't understand how to set it up and don't wanna break stuff.

  • @CheesyMcBeard
    @CheesyMcBeard 5 років тому

    Before this video: YAY LET'S OVERCLOCK MY NEW 9900K
    After this video: Screw you guys, i'm going with stock.

  • @ljfaag
    @ljfaag 6 років тому

    Can you show us which point you're measuring with the multimeter probe or how to determine that point?

  • @kodiw202
    @kodiw202 4 роки тому

    Great, you've suddenly gotten me worried about my 6700k @1.37v 😅

  • @053180jlove
    @053180jlove 5 років тому

    I have a stupid question, I have a Ryzen 1600x and a strix B-450 f motherboard. My cpu core voltage is at 1.443 to 1.455. I don't want to overclock my cpu but I know Ryzen suggested voltage is 1.335. How to I lower my voltage and keep my cpu at 3.6mhz. It's not crashing but I want to know how to manually lower my voltage

  • @dorbot
    @dorbot 6 років тому

    Not sure a multimeter is the best instrument for this task because I'm not sure how they deal with transients. 1960s oscilloscopes are probably better and they look really cool! . 😁

  • @bestonyoutube
    @bestonyoutube 5 років тому

    Those new Ryzen3000 CPUs seem to have 1.4xx V so theyll mostly die in the next months.

  • @diablowrathltd
    @diablowrathltd 6 років тому

    I have been running my Fx 6300 @ 5.1 Ghz with 1.56v for over a year. So 2:15 isn't completely correct. The Fx line (ancient I know) has a max of around 1.55v. Usually temps will get you before you reach that temp.

  • @kristiangronberg3150
    @kristiangronberg3150 6 років тому

    Hi man, I'm just curious. Did you check the voltage difference between the 8 pin ground and the mesurments capasitor ground?
    the difference is still so much that there is over volt, but if the ground points is (because the resistance in the motherboard) higher than the 8 pin ground, the cpu will see lower voltage. It might be marginal, but like I said, just curious
    All the best and thanks for the great work!