- Jun 30, 2004
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So. As I said in that older thread I started about killing my motherboard USB controller with unwise behaviors, I put in the replacement (identical) board with a new Silly-Lots De-Lidded i7-7700K and a two-stick RAM kit of virtually the same TridentZ DDR4-3200 14-14-14 RAM sticks. I bought the 2x16GB=32GB RAM to alleviate stress on the IMC, although it was probably unnecessary. But I know I should be able to run 'em at Command-Rate = 1, so there . . .
I'm scouring my server and now-recovered system for any screen-shots or notes I took when I overclocked the Skylake. I've turned up 18 pages of handwritten notes, and now remember that -- somewhere -- I put it all in an Excel file,, so I'll look for that . . . too . . .
Wanted to get this beast up and running just for stock settings, since I "use" my computer for things, like tax preparation. And I have medical appointments in my Outlook calendar which were made before I zapped the vaping-pen with a dry-windy-day-shuffle-on the carpet static charge on January 15.
But just for preliminaries, I started looking at my real-time HW-Info screens while running a three-pass sequence of LinX. I thought the core temperatures were a bit too high. You'd expect a spread between the four cores of up to 10C here or there, bouncing around in a 5 to 8C degree range more of the time. But I noticed the temperatures on at least one core spiking to 75C, and I'm running stock settings.
Took a closer look. GEEE-sus! the motherboard was giving an "Auto"-determined VCCIO voltage of 1.32V, and I think the VCCSA system agent voltage was around 1.28V. Where does THAT come from? So I down-clocked the RAM to 2,133 Mhz, exited and re-entered the BIOS. NOW it looks normal -- with about 0.968V for the VCCIO and 1.072V for the VCCSA setting under auto. I KNOW this RAM runs under a VCCIO of around 1.15V with 4 sticks of the same specification at the spec speed of 3200 14-14-14.
This is -- to people posting their exuberant threads about their i7-10700K and other processors with Z390/490 motherboards -- an old version. It's a Z170 board. But there are always new BIOS versions, and I can't remember how I started tweaking the Skylake four years ago. Did I run the RAM at a lower speed and then fix the voltages before twisting it up to 3200 Mhz? I can't remember.
I DO remember that I made an early note of the "Auto" Skylake VCORE, also reading in at least two reliable sources that Intel had only released "safe-voltage" info to their motherboard partners. The boards -- even then -- were overvolting the processor. And I found enough chatter on the web today to confirm that boards are over-volting things like VCCIO/IMC and VCCSA.
Are there any insightful observations about the initial overclocking strategy that someone learned under these scenarios? I have a few ideas, because I vaguely remember what I did in 2017, and I have my notes -- if I can read them!
I'm scouring my server and now-recovered system for any screen-shots or notes I took when I overclocked the Skylake. I've turned up 18 pages of handwritten notes, and now remember that -- somewhere -- I put it all in an Excel file,, so I'll look for that . . . too . . .
Wanted to get this beast up and running just for stock settings, since I "use" my computer for things, like tax preparation. And I have medical appointments in my Outlook calendar which were made before I zapped the vaping-pen with a dry-windy-day-shuffle-on the carpet static charge on January 15.
But just for preliminaries, I started looking at my real-time HW-Info screens while running a three-pass sequence of LinX. I thought the core temperatures were a bit too high. You'd expect a spread between the four cores of up to 10C here or there, bouncing around in a 5 to 8C degree range more of the time. But I noticed the temperatures on at least one core spiking to 75C, and I'm running stock settings.
Took a closer look. GEEE-sus! the motherboard was giving an "Auto"-determined VCCIO voltage of 1.32V, and I think the VCCSA system agent voltage was around 1.28V. Where does THAT come from? So I down-clocked the RAM to 2,133 Mhz, exited and re-entered the BIOS. NOW it looks normal -- with about 0.968V for the VCCIO and 1.072V for the VCCSA setting under auto. I KNOW this RAM runs under a VCCIO of around 1.15V with 4 sticks of the same specification at the spec speed of 3200 14-14-14.
This is -- to people posting their exuberant threads about their i7-10700K and other processors with Z390/490 motherboards -- an old version. It's a Z170 board. But there are always new BIOS versions, and I can't remember how I started tweaking the Skylake four years ago. Did I run the RAM at a lower speed and then fix the voltages before twisting it up to 3200 Mhz? I can't remember.
I DO remember that I made an early note of the "Auto" Skylake VCORE, also reading in at least two reliable sources that Intel had only released "safe-voltage" info to their motherboard partners. The boards -- even then -- were overvolting the processor. And I found enough chatter on the web today to confirm that boards are over-volting things like VCCIO/IMC and VCCSA.
Are there any insightful observations about the initial overclocking strategy that someone learned under these scenarios? I have a few ideas, because I vaguely remember what I did in 2017, and I have my notes -- if I can read them!