- Jun 30, 2004
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So.
I have scattered the blather about my marvelous i7-6700K "system-on-air" across several forums, beginning with my temperature results for a system with a processor-CLU-re-lidding.
I got my initial clock settings done for a notch lower than initially-proven expectations using Windows 7. The processor was binned at 4.8; my best -- limited by my personal voltage concerns -- was 4.7 with maximum loaded VCORE at 1.408V.
There were other things that took my attention. A couple driver-instability problems (even in Win 7) caused me to reset at stock and then pick 4.6 for 24/7. But I knew I had 4.7 in my back pocket.
I had also added Win 10 in a dual-boot configuration -- also much discussed in my scatter of thread posts here and there. [Much discussed because of runaway fingers and thoughtless self-absorption, perhaps . . . or just enthusiasm.]
Attention was then turned to the storage system. I began to work more and more with Win 10. The worst unexpected hurdle I faced came in the form of Build 1703, both for the dual-boot BCD issues and an undesired notice from Windows at boot-time about a drive volume. And I'm on top of the world again for that. Beautiful! Superb! Su-u-u-perior! Super!
I told myself this morning that it was time to "get back" to 4.7 Ghz, but it needed validation with some stress runs.
I got through Linx affinitized 25 iterations without error, but the GLOPS were not "tightly grouped," and I was suspicious of the "residuals" column, which should all be the same. I ran the Prime95 test for voltage and speed stability -- an "in place" Prime 95 custom setting with Min and Max FFT size of 1344. 15 minutes was supposed to prove it; it ran error-free for 90 minutes.
Then, I decided to run Prime95 small FFT. System would throw an error in a single thread between 1 minute and 6 minutes. Decided to double-check with OCCT's own CPU test. Error in 6 minutes.
I started tweaking the VCCIO and VCCSA in small increments -- no cigar. Reduced the memory speed from 3,200 Mhz ddr to 3,000 -- no cigar.
Started bumping up the VCORE. moving up about 10 mV, OCCT would run an hour and a half before erroring out. Tried Prime: about 10 minutes.
So last round of attempts, I had pushed the voltage to a point where VID was showing 1.44V and minimum loaded VCORE wouldn't drop below 1.424V.
No cigar.
Back to 4.6 Ghz, VCORE at 1.37V with a 20mV margin for comfort -- No Problemo.
Prime95 small FFT just keeps on ticking, the processor stands up to the licking.
Has anyone noticed this? That your stress tests would leave you with different limits in different OS versions? That somehow, certain stress tests would fail quickly at the same settings in one OS version compared to the other?
Folks had been telling me recently "Why do you keep Win 7 bootable?! It's ten years old!"
Whatever -- but there's a discrepancy here. I also have a couple theories about what you get with a binned processor. I don't blame Silly Lots, but it just stands to reason.
I am sure that my processor has not degraded. And I will return to Win 7 and re-run the tests of several months ago at the 4.7 setting. But this peculiar difference I had noticed very early in the game -- I just didn't give it my attention for a long time. I've only started working with Win 10 a lot more in the last two months . . . .
I have scattered the blather about my marvelous i7-6700K "system-on-air" across several forums, beginning with my temperature results for a system with a processor-CLU-re-lidding.
I got my initial clock settings done for a notch lower than initially-proven expectations using Windows 7. The processor was binned at 4.8; my best -- limited by my personal voltage concerns -- was 4.7 with maximum loaded VCORE at 1.408V.
There were other things that took my attention. A couple driver-instability problems (even in Win 7) caused me to reset at stock and then pick 4.6 for 24/7. But I knew I had 4.7 in my back pocket.
I had also added Win 10 in a dual-boot configuration -- also much discussed in my scatter of thread posts here and there. [Much discussed because of runaway fingers and thoughtless self-absorption, perhaps . . . or just enthusiasm.]
Attention was then turned to the storage system. I began to work more and more with Win 10. The worst unexpected hurdle I faced came in the form of Build 1703, both for the dual-boot BCD issues and an undesired notice from Windows at boot-time about a drive volume. And I'm on top of the world again for that. Beautiful! Superb! Su-u-u-perior! Super!
I told myself this morning that it was time to "get back" to 4.7 Ghz, but it needed validation with some stress runs.
I got through Linx affinitized 25 iterations without error, but the GLOPS were not "tightly grouped," and I was suspicious of the "residuals" column, which should all be the same. I ran the Prime95 test for voltage and speed stability -- an "in place" Prime 95 custom setting with Min and Max FFT size of 1344. 15 minutes was supposed to prove it; it ran error-free for 90 minutes.
Then, I decided to run Prime95 small FFT. System would throw an error in a single thread between 1 minute and 6 minutes. Decided to double-check with OCCT's own CPU test. Error in 6 minutes.
I started tweaking the VCCIO and VCCSA in small increments -- no cigar. Reduced the memory speed from 3,200 Mhz ddr to 3,000 -- no cigar.
Started bumping up the VCORE. moving up about 10 mV, OCCT would run an hour and a half before erroring out. Tried Prime: about 10 minutes.
So last round of attempts, I had pushed the voltage to a point where VID was showing 1.44V and minimum loaded VCORE wouldn't drop below 1.424V.
No cigar.
Back to 4.6 Ghz, VCORE at 1.37V with a 20mV margin for comfort -- No Problemo.
Prime95 small FFT just keeps on ticking, the processor stands up to the licking.
Has anyone noticed this? That your stress tests would leave you with different limits in different OS versions? That somehow, certain stress tests would fail quickly at the same settings in one OS version compared to the other?
Folks had been telling me recently "Why do you keep Win 7 bootable?! It's ten years old!"
Whatever -- but there's a discrepancy here. I also have a couple theories about what you get with a binned processor. I don't blame Silly Lots, but it just stands to reason.
I am sure that my processor has not degraded. And I will return to Win 7 and re-run the tests of several months ago at the 4.7 setting. But this peculiar difference I had noticed very early in the game -- I just didn't give it my attention for a long time. I've only started working with Win 10 a lot more in the last two months . . . .