Or save some money and get the 4690K, only $200 at MC. It has for times the cores of what you are using now, and saves money for Skylake-K or Cannonlake-K.
I like that.or OR... Instead of spending money on an even bigger downgrade, he could simply you know... Not spend any until a worthwhile upgrade is available.
Well I can't even OC my CPU to 3.9 GHz (max stock single core turbo on all core loads) without an issue. At 3.9 GHz sometime my PC will turn back on a few seconds later after I turn it off despite it running stable in Intel Burn Test and Prime 95 for hours. This is with the vcore on Auto which is around 1.19v for my CPU. I can even run these stress tests for hours without issue at 4.2 GHz 1.17v yet starting at 3.9 GHz 1.19v if have this "turning back on" issue when turning off my system.
Why spend money replacing something that is perfectly fine, when new toys are right around the corner?
If the mobo turns back on after an ATX soft power-off event, then chances are, the mobo is damaged.
Hello... is this thing on?
Your voltage is too low to make any determinations about your CPUs overclocking potential.
Given what seems to be reluctance on your part to adjust the voltage upward, I do recommend a 4790K at this time. Even at stock it will be faster at a great many things than an Ivy Bridge at 3.6-3.9GHz, moar cores notwithstanding. I guess this should come with the caveat that the board selected should be able to run all four cores at max turbo. My Z97-UD5H does this by default, so there really isn't even a need to overclock it.
Max turbo on all cores is overclocking for the 4790k, overclocking the all-core CPU frequency that is. If I wanted to run at Intel CPU stock settings for the 4790k, not motherboard stock settings for the CPU for the motherboard you mentioned here, the 4790k would run at 4.2 GHz on all core loads and only max turbo 4.4 GHz on 1-2 core loads. So like my 4930k when I set it to run at 3.9 GHz all core loads getting stability issues, there is also no guaranteed stability when running at 4.4 GHz on all cores on the 4790k either. I would trust the manufacturer of the CPU over a motherboard manufacturer when it comes to CPU settings.
No. Decent mobo manufacturers include MCE or Multi-Core Enhancement. My 5930K runs all core 3.7GHz @ 1.1v or less, same as running stock 3.5GHz. A 4790K would run @ 4.4GHz no problem either. It looks like the socket is damaged.
Every time someone sidegrades like you, a sad panda cries. Please no more sad pandas.
PS: if I were you I would spend my free time attempting a stable oc. By the time you either succeed or just give up, Skylake will likely be here.
I would trust the manufacturer of the CPU over a motherboard manufacturer when it comes to CPU settings.
