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ivailoindjov

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  1. I managed to get my CPU stable at 1.25v with a 4.2GHz all core overclock, but I still can't get my bios' voltage settings to matter I also updated the video so that it's no longer private and can be seen - I would greatly appreciate if anyone has any similar experience, and I'm also contacting Asus' support for this too.
  2. Hello everyone, nice to meet you! Now that we have the awkward introduction out of the way, where I don't even introduce myself, let us get to the topic at hand - either Ryzen Master is crazy, I'm crazy, or by motherboard is borked. Or I'm doing something wrong - which is most probably the case - but I need your help to find out! I got my Ryzen 3900x yesterday, along with an Asus TUF gaming X570 Plus motherboard, Corsair Vengeance LPX 3000MHz CL15, a 1TB 970 Evo and a gtx 1080TI second hand (I also have a post about weird videocard problems if anyone is interested). I assembled my PC, booted from the first try, really happy since I'm upgprading from a 3570K, set my DOCP and went on to install Windows. Got the latest ASUS bios - AGESA 1.0.0.3 Patch ABB - got the latest motherboard chipset drivers with the Ryzen Balanced power plan, got the video drivers and so on, then went on to install Ryzen Master, CPU-Z, GPU-Z and Prime95. First things first - I saw my voltage go up to 1.47v in Ryzen Master, got worried, then started to do some reading - it's fine from what I can tell and happens to enable high single core boosts. While idle my voltage drops to 1.048v - 1.1v and stays there unless I do something, and it spikes back up to 1.45v+. While running Prime95 I see about 1.35v so that's fine as well - but I decided to watch some overclocking videos nonetheless. Went to see Jayz2cents and then LTT's videos - the latest one by Anthony is a godsend, really, it helped me out A LOT. I got tighter RAM timings to work, and thanks to both videos now I kind of understand what voltages to look for. I also notice that I get constant temperature spikes, as seen in the attached screenshot, but I understand that this is normal as well - so not going to bother you about that either, unless you really want to help me with it So here comes the tricky part! I got an all core 4.2GHz overclock with 1.325v and it was running Prime95 all night with no problems - I actually got to this overclock after 2-3 hours of fiddling, when I finally figured out what I was doing wrong. I haven't tried going lower than this voltage yet, or higher in clock speeds, because...I noticed that I can't set my voltage through my bios, only through Ryzen Master. Whatever I choose from the bios is literally ignored - doesn't matter if I set an offset, or a set amount, when I launch it just sits at 1.1v and that's it. When I override it with Ryzen Master - it's fine, and that's how I set my PC last night for the stability test. Please look at the video below - when I keep everything at stock settings, I have normal voltage fluctuations based on the load and clock speed. When I set my RAM DOCP profile and timings, play with the power delivery and load line calibration - everything is still fine and works. Doesn't matter what voltages I set though - as long as the CPU multiplier is on auto, my voltage settings are ignored. Also once I turn on OC mode - my CPU voltage gets stuck at 1.1v and stays there, no matter what. In the video I go through my voltage settings, DIGI+VRM settings and my ram timings, just so you can see everything. Please excuse me for the poor camera work and lack of dramatic soundtrack and effects. https://youtu.be/f1zBsBEBBQ4 (I am posting this right after the video upload, and 360p isn't my friend when it comes to showing small text on a screen...sorry!) I am just a little bit tilted, since I spent 12 hours yesterday to take out my old parts, clean the case, mount new fans, put in the new parts, go through all the software and firmware and whatnot, set the timings correctly and play with the overclocking to, in the end, not be able to set my overclock through the bios so that the PC can just launch that way. Worst case scenario I will get the best possible speeds with the lowest voltage and keep it as a profile in Ryzen Master, and just live with the clocks and voltage on stock and apply the overclock manually every time I launch my PC (or just never turn it off again) but I would much rather learn what's going wrong, and possibly how to fix it. Oh great knowledgeable ones of the LTT lands, please lend me your wisdom! Kthxbye. (Is the post cringy enough or do I need to try harder next time?)
  3. Correction - now I can't get 4k60 even with YCbCr 422 - which I could before I changed my PC. This is getting better and better! Hi Vivo-US - thanks for the interest in the post - I just changed my motherboard, CPU and SSD, did a complete fresh install of Windows 10 pro, with the latest nVidia drivers and everything - with the same GTX 1080ti and still no luck getting 4k60 with anything above YCbCr 422 I guess I'll have to go for a DP to HDMI cable as you suggested, or get a DP to HDMI adapter. Ah well...
  4. Hello everyone, first post here! I have a TCL U55P6046 TV (European version of the 55" TCL) and I have a PC and a PS4 pro. Using the exact same cable, I can get 4k60 through the PS4 with full colour range, while with my Gigabyte 1080ti I can't get 4k60 unless I lower it to YCbCr 422 colour range. I am at a complete loss - I have tried upgrading and downgrading my drivers, both HDMI ports, different cables, different ports on the TV, I have been troubleshooting this for months...so I would really appreciate any fresh ideas. I can output 4k60 from a macbook pro to the TV, with full colour as well, with the same cable (and the appropriate dongle) - so I'm pretty sure it's not the cable itself. Plus I have had the same results with the macbook and PS4 with two other cables - and neither of them work for the PC. I'm both mad and quite sad at this point
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