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Hi LTT Community, I updated my rig with a Core i9 12900K and it's reaching really high temperatures under load (100C). I know 12th Gen Intel CPUs are known to be toasty but I'm not sure if 100C under load is normal? Under normal use (Multiple tabs in Opera, Edge, Plex, Word, Photoshop, Illustrator) it stays well within 32-50C but playing demanding games (Hogwarts Legacy, Last of Us, Plague Tale: Requiem) or rending anything on Premiere pushes it to 100C (It also reaches 100C under stress tests like Cinebench). It doesn't go above 100C and the cooler tries to bring it down to 90C but struggles. Is this safe? Do I need to change any settings or is 100C fine for this chip? All temperature were monitored on HWMonitor. My specifications (custom build): Asus Prime Z690 Motherboard Intel Core i9 12900K darkFlash Twister DX360 360mm AIO 32 GB DDR4 3200MHz Crucial Ballistix RAM (8GBx4) Nvidia GeForce RTX 3070 TI (MSI Ventus x3) Windows 11 22H2 on Samsung 990 Pro NZXT C850 80+ Gold Power Supply NZXT H710i Case All the extra fans the case comes with (Three on top, and one exhaust at the back, plus AIO + fans in the front) in performance mode in NZXT CAM The system is stable even at 100C. I haven't seen any game crashes or even shut downs, I'm just a bit worried about the temps reaching 100C and if there is something I've missed in the configuration that's causing such high temps. I also understand CPUs don't really toast themselves so easily and thermal throttle when temperatures reach so high, but I'm worried about the motherboard and other components that might suffer because of the high heat and if there is anything, apart from replacing my AIO (which I don't really have the finances for) that can bring the temps down. I also want to know if I'm just getting anxious and a 100C peak is normal for the 12900K? Any help would be appreciated, thanks!
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HP promised to shake up the PC industry with an innovative new CPU cooler design, and I was this close to declaring it the new gaming performance king of prebuilts... Buy OMEN 45L Gaming Desktop HP: https://geni.us/SCBswH Best Buy: https://geni.us/OUPWnSk Buy Intel Core i9-12900K Desktop Processor Amazon: https://geni.us/hrzU Best Buy: https://geni.us/1niRuZp Newegg: https://geni.us/SLwDuCA Buy NVIDIA RTX 3090 Amazon: https://geni.us/rMWpj Best Buy: https://geni.us/24AQV5 Newegg: https://geni.us/4aL0 Buy Cooler Master MasterLiquid ML240L RGB V2 Amazon: https://geni.us/Pk1el Newegg: https://geni.us/3VIFJj B&H: https://geni.us/0OhoroT Purchases made through some store links may provide some compensation to Linus Media Group.
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I am using a mini-ATX computer case, Rosewill SRM-01B, and only have a 750-watts PSU (EVGA BQ 750). I have set the XMP profile of the RAM modules to 3200MHz. And I prefer not to overclock the CPU [and GPU]. How do I know if I accidentally changed something related to CPU overclocking while tinkering in the UEFI settings? This is my 2nd PC build. The 1st PC build was around over 10 years ago. Thank you.
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I have some questions about this CPU regardless the laptop models that have it. I want to know about the chip, but couldn't find information I need so I think some of you is better than me to get them. What is the stock uncore ratio of this CPU specified by Intel? On SSE single threaded test, how much power this CPU takes? and how much is the reached frequency there? considering no thermal throttling or power limits is initiated. The same question for AVX and AVX2 stress tests on single thread only.
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Summary Intel's Core i9-13900KS Special Edition processor, which is available today for $699, is the world's first consumer CPU to run at 6 GHz without overclocking. With a whopping 250W base power specification, it's also now officially the most power-hungry desktop CPU in history — it also peaks at 320W in a new Extreme Power Delivery Profile. Hardware Unboxed had a chance to get ahold of the processor, and conducted a thorough review, with many benchmarks. While the CPU performs better than its 13900K brother, it's usually by 1-7% on average (faster in some other specific scenarios). It also appears that this CPU takes advantage of higher speed memory too. Quotes My thoughts So I'm sure many people expected this. That there was going to be a price premium over the 13900k, for not that much of an increase in performance. However, for those that need the best of the best, this is definitely the chip for you. There seemed to be some specific use cases where it performed notably. However, on average, it seemed to hover around the 1-7% mark over the 13900k, as mentioned in the summary. I guess if you are an overclocker and want to see what the binning is like, this processor also might be for you. However, for the majority of us, the 13900KS is just a KOTH CPU for bragging rights. I agree that it's nice to break the 6 GHz out of the box barrier though. That's definitely cool. Nevertheless, I see this processor as possibly also being a beta test for whatever revisions they plan on doing with the Raptor Lake refresh coming out in Q3 of 2023. Regardless, it's nice that Hardware Unboxed got ahold of the processor and gave us a proper review. As it doesn't seem Intel seeded out this CPU to reviewers, and I'm hard pressed to find one besides from HW Unboxed. Sources https://www.tomshardware.com/news/intel-launches-dollar699-core-i9-13900ks-the-worlds-first-6-ghz-cpu-available-now https://www.overclock3d.net/news/cpu_mainboard/intel_launches_limited_edition_i9-13900ks_cpu_for_689_99/1 https://www.anandtech.com/show/18726/intel-unveils-core-i9-13900ks-raptor-lake-spreads-its-wings-to-6-0-ghz https://www.techpowerup.com/303478/intel-launches-core-i9-13900ks-8p-16e-flagship-processor-at-usd-700 https://www.kitguru.net/components/cpu/dominic-moass/intel-announces-i9-13900ks-with-6ghz-turbo-clock/ https://www.guru3d.com/news-story/intel-unleashes-core-i9-13900ks-8p16e-processor-at-699.html https://hothardware.com/news/intel-unleashes-6ghz-core-i9-13900ks-raptor-lake-processor https://videocardz.com/newz/intel-launches-core-i9-13900ks-24-core-6-0-ghz-cpu-at-699 https://www.pcgamer.com/intel-core-i9-13900ks-release-date-price/ https://www.eteknix.com/intel-finally-unveils-core-i9-13900ks-700/
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Intel’s back with the 10th-gen Core lineup, and they’re still on 14nm. Are the new chips fire, or are they like fire – too hot? Buy a Core i9 10900K: On Amazon (PAID LINK): TBD On Newegg (PAID LINK): TBD On B&H (PAID LINK): TBD Buy a Core i5 10600K: On Amazon (PAID LINK): TBD On Newegg (PAID LINK): TBD On B&H (PAID LINK): TBD
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Hi I just recently built a new machine and have been attempting an overclock and have been getting very strange results. I changed the core ration to 50 and the voltage to 1.33 first which failed (it just blue screened it would even start any stress test there didn't seem to be any thermal issues). I then increased voltage with no luck. The only thing that worked was setting voltage to auto which made the voltage go up to right around 1.39 or 1.4 volts. This didn't present any thermal issues when I ran cinebench or the intel extreme tuning stress test and furmark with temps peaking at 93 and averaging 85. However what was most frustrating was my Cinebench scores went down after overclock, from 4820 at stock to 4400 at 5Ghz. I have gone into task manager and made Cinebench high priority but still no luck. Specs: CPU: Intel Core i9 9900k Cooler: Be Quiet Dark Rock Pro 4 Motherboard: Gigabyte Z390i Aorus Pro Wifi Memory: 32Gb (2x16) Crucial 3200Mhz (XMP enabled) GPU: Radeon VII Power Supply: EVGA GM 650 Any help would be greatly appreciated!
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Ive been working cutting lawns and have enough to buy a 7700K and have a bit left over. Should I continue working until I raise the £750e needed to buy one of the new LGA2066 Core i9 Extreme processors. Im not working within a set budget but would like to keep it within £4000 I have set aside £1600 for 2 EVGA GeForce GTX 1080Ti FTW3 cards. I am building a system primarily for video editing and gaming in a Corsair Carbide Series 400C ATX case and using a RM1000x power supply (both of which I have already bought). It seems to be a little strange to see a 13 year-old beginner jumping in with a high-power, high-cost system after using a low spec late 2012 mac for almost 5 years but I am fed up of not being able to play games at 1080p on settings higher than lowest stably. On less demanding games I can usually squeeze 20-30fps out of my 512mb GeForce GT 640M at 1080p. I would also like to be able to access more VR games as the PlayStationVR game library is very limited and is lacking many adventure games but I am really enjoying playing Star Trek Bridge Crew that I pre-ordered months ago that came jut the other day. I am willing to work for the money like I have been for the past three months. I AM ONLY GOING FOR INTEL/NVIDIA since I believe they are the best for Multi-Threadded performance although AMD's new X399 'Threadripper' CPU seems pretty promising. I just thought to ask for advice.
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It is a know rumor that X299 chipsets being leaked everywhere. While at it, AnandTech forum member "Sweepr" posted some interesting specs about upcoming processors (could be a rumor). Listing out some interesting processor naming scheme such as Intel Core i9. This list includes CPUs that are listed for release in June, though there is also Intel's rumored 12-core Skylake-X flagship, which is listed for an August release. If the above table is true, they're after AMD to smash their Ryzen 7 lineup. Looking at those 7820x and 7900x those Boost Clock speeds are higher than Ryzen 7 1800x. This could be useful in many ways! - L2 cache = 1MB (Skylake-X), 4x as much as Core i7-7700K - Dual DDR4-2666 for Kaby Lake-X / Quad DDR4-2666 for Skylake-X - 112W for Kaby Lake-X / up to 160W for Skylake-X - Apparently all Core i9 parts support AVX-512 (TBC) - Launch in June, except 7920X (August) For 10-Core Skylake-X benchmark, Click Here. For 12-Core Skylake-X benchmark, Click Here. From WCCFTech (obviously not the best place for trustworthy source) As for the pricing, Intel could price this over $2000. Because, previously i7-6950x was priced around 1700 bucks. So, they'll definitely increase the price for i9, if this is true. Source: OverClock3D.net, AnandTech, WCCFTech.
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- intel core i9
- core i9
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Hey guys, I find myself confused about PCIe lanes, and I'm sure one of you understands this better. I have a TUF Mark 1 x299 board with an Intel Core i9 7900X, so I have 44 3.0 lanes to work with. Here are the motherboards PCIe slots: 3xPCIe 3.0 (x16), 2xPCIe 3.0/2.0 (x4) (1_PCIe (x1), 2_PCIe (x4)) 2xPCIe 3.0 M.2 (x4)Here's what I have / want in them:1_PCIe 3.0 (x16) GTX 1080 (3.0x16) (Have)1_PCIe 3.0/2.0 (X1) HDSPe AIO (1.0x1) (Have)2_PCIe 3.0 (x16) GTX 1050ti (3.0x16) (Have)2_PCIe 3.0/2.0 (x4) [Empty]3_PCIe 3.0 (x16) Magewell Pro Capture 4k+ (2.0x4) (Have)1_PCIe 3.0 M.2 (x4) Intel 600P 1tb (3.0x4) (Have)2_PCIe 3.0 M.2 (x4) Intel 600P 1tb (3.0x4) (Want)So if you add up the lanes of what each device uses:40 PCIe 3.0 lanes4 PCIe 2.0 lanes1 PCIe 1.0 laneWith a total of 45 lanes.This exceeds the 44 lanes on my CPU correct? Or are the 2.0 / 1.0 lanes run through the board and not the CPU? If it is taking up all my lanes which device will throttle? I would prefer the GTX 1050ti as it is just dedicated to encoding and PhysX, will I have to move it to a different slot to make sure it is the device that throttles?Am I even on the right path here?Thank you, hope it isn't too confusing.
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Intel's new lineup of HEDT CPUs has finally arrived, but are they just a power-hungry reaction to AMD? Buy the Core i9 7980XE: On Amazon: TBD On Newegg: http://geni.us/UA7b Buy the Core i9 7960X: On Amazon: TBD On Newegg: http://geni.us/5Lq9 Buy the Core i9 7900X: On Amazon: http://geni.us/Ap5A5Q On Newegg: http://geni.us/BjtfQzW Buy the Threadripper 1950X: On Amazon: http://geni.us/oJLhSO On Newegg: http://geni.us/CApUc8 Buy the ASUS Rampage VI Apex: On Amazon: http://geni.us/ADuEF On Newegg: http://geni.us/xcB1uat
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Looks like Der8auer is at it again tearing apart massive CPUs. Weirdly enough the CPU looks glued to another PCB, this design suspiciously looks like some form of Xeon has been glued to an enthusiast grade 2066 socket. Who else thinks this? My suspicion is there's possibly a BGA style interconnect between the layers. Source: http://www.tomshardware.com/news/intel-i9-7920x-delid-die-skylake-x,35406.html
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Source: http://www.tomshardware.com/picturestory/780-delidder-intel-core-i9-skylake-x.html#s6 My opinion: I think that this is a great tool that will make the process of de-lidding so much easier. I particularly like the features and design of the de-lidder that help prevent any damage to the CPU and also how it makes the process of de-lidding so much easier. I also think that its a great tool that will save you time and money when it comes to de-lidding your CPU. I dont have the details of pricing or the release date, but it would be interesting on what the price is for this tool. Here are some images of the prototype:
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Skylake-X CPUs have higher latency compared to Broadwell-E
Guest posted a topic in CPUs, Motherboards, and Memory
It seems like that the new Skylake X CPUs have higher Thread to Thread latency than their Broadwell-E counterparts. Skylake X, unlike Consumer Skylake uses a meshed architecture to make moving data more efficient, which somehow also increases Thread to Thread latency. Here is a recap of the meshed architecture: http://www.tomshardware.com/news/intel-mesh-architecture-skylake-x-hedt,34806.html Tested with higher RAM speeds: Source: https://www.pcper.com/reviews/Processors/Intel-Core-i9-7900X-10-core-Skylake-X-Processor-Review/Thread-Thread-Latency-and- TL:DR; Intel went full AMD. Note to mods: I wrote this post in the news format, but I don't think it's big enough to be in the News section. If you feel different, feel free to move it. Originally posted in the CPU section. -
Source: https://videocardz.com/newz/intels-12-core-i9-7920x-features-2-9-ghz-base-clock The 799$ 12-core TR have a base clock of 3.5Ghz. Knowing how hot and power hungry i9's are these are Intel's only option to put the temperature under control.
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Core i9 7920x OCing, help me please!
cyrustheviruz1 posted a topic in CPUs, Motherboards, and Memory
Ok so to start from the beginning... I inherited a core i9 7920x cpu on the way cheap recently which is great because I run a computer drafting business from home and I game alot, so cool beans have a 12c/24t chip. I bought a good motherboard to run it from, My entire PC specs are as follows: Core i9 7920x...............................CPU Asus X299 Strix E........................ Motherboard Nvidia Titan X pascal................... GPU 1 TB intel 660 SSD...................... Boot drive 2 TB seagate HDD...................... Storage drive 1200W EVGA Platinum SN..........PSU 280mm Corsair H115i platinum... Cooler 48 GB Corsair 3200 MHz DDR4.. Ram (6x8GB sticks running quad channel) Windows 10 64bit.........................OS As you can see, pretty beefy machine with some good quality components. I'm no stranger to PCs, Overclocking, tinkering, etc. Now the issues I'm having are overclocking. My temps stay under 85c even at 4.4 to 4.5Ghz across 12 cores, I've tried upper voltages, upping the Input voltage, messing with all of the external DIGI whatever settings and everything will be cool for awhile then BAM! out of nowhere a Whea uncorrectable or the PC will reset. Somewhere along the line there is something I'm not doing right. I've put AVX offsets on, Tried lowering it to 4.3Ghz, etc. etc. Now I know this sounds ridiculous, but could somebody please take the time to, (As said in the words of Denzel Washington) Please explain this to me like I'm a 4 year old. Step by step what voltages I should have, should I use Asus multi core enhancement, should I not? What are safe voltages, etc. etc. down to the nitty gritty so I can stabilize this thing. In short, what are the best recommendations? I have an X99 5960x PC, I've owned a X79 in the past, but this platform is little foreign to me. I know there are things about Skylake X that are different than previous HEDTs platforms. In advance, I appreciate everyone's comments. P.S. I had a thought that maybe the RAM is putting it out of whack because I have an odd number of sticks, 6 vs. 4 or 8, The manual says that technically I can do this but I'm almost wondering if I should have just left it at 4 sticks.- 6 replies
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- overclocking
- cpu
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Hello guys I'm looking for information about this everywhere without any luck, maybe someone have some experience on this and would like to be educated on the matter. Sometime ago I returned a core i9 CPU to Intel because all the sudden turn off with a 00 code on the motherboard (MSI) I RMA both.. old treat: HERE. Anyways both of them are back and working; however, I'm still unable to sleep, overclock or enable XMP again. Someone on the old post suggest to change the PSU. I did not agree because it was working with others PC fine, so I order a new motherboard thinking the MSI does not have double CPU Power connector, so I order an Asus. The Asus boots fine, but as soon as I enable XPM it die.. Try everything like bios reset, bios re-flash without luck. With my finger cross (thinking I blow the CPU again) i transfer everything back to MSI and it works fine. So i decide to change the PSU. I buy a 1000 Watts (coming from 860) Turns out it fail again with a sleep test (00 CPU Code), Luckily the MSI have a double bios setup, so by switching to the second one everything reset to default and Computer boots. 20 something years dealing with computers......never seen an issue like this. Current settings: Sleep Mode disable. No XMP No Overclocking Note: Only difference with old system is add and extra set of RAMS. Now all slots populated 8x sticks to a total of 64G. (Please keep in mind it was 32G when it fails the first time) The RAMS are Corsair LPX 3200. 4 whites and 4 Blacks (I don't think they differ besides just the color) I can sacrifice the overclocking and even the XMP but not being able to sleep is killing me. I render videos (only reason for the core i9) and most time i let then running overnight. Waking up to a full on computer doing nothing bothers me (Electricity and wear, etc $$$) Anyone? Thanks in advance.
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- core i9
- 64gigs ram
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Another year, another iMac, but this time we got a pretty big upgrade in CPU horsepower! Can the iMac tame the Core i9, or are we in for an epic burn? Buy an iMac from Apple: https://lmg.gg/8KVX5 Buy a Core i9 9900K: From Amazon: https://geni.us/0KZO7 From Newegg: https://lmg.gg/8KVXz
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So , I am planning to upgrade my current CPU which is a Core I7 4790k. I decided only to upgrade when current gen CPUs is at least 50% better than mine https://cpu.userbenchmark.com/Compare/Intel-Core-i9-9900K-vs-Intel-Core-i7-4790K/4028vs2384 I am stuck between 2 choices , either go for the Core I9 9900k or Wait for the 10th gen. But , I will be able to upgrade my PC around June/ July and I heard the 10th gen will come out at the holiday. Specs: Core I7 4790k 16GB ram ddr3 ( 1600 MHZ) Asus z97 TUF grpyphon armor motherboard. MSI GTX 1080 SeaHawkX 8tb in HDD storage about 750 GB in SSD storage.
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No this isn't a April 1st joke of a cpu, it's an actual thing that was listed by Finalwire, the people who made the stress test suite AIDA64. Not much is known at this point about what Core i9 9900KFC is, but looking at Intel's letter scheme, we know that https://www.anandtech.com/show/13967/intel-core-i9-9900kfc-processor
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FYI, I want to do air cooling for my pc build since I really don't want to deal with installing an AIO water cooler and all that jazz. So, is the NH-D15 enough to cool the Core i9-9900k and make sure it won't overheat? ( I checked on pcpartpicker to make sure they were compatible ? )
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Hello guys! This is my last Project "CERBERUS" buided in 2011 (i7 990X@5Ghz/ EVGA E760 Classified/ 24Gb DDR3/ 3x EVGA GTX580/ 1500W PSU)... From that time I obviously builded systems, but I not had an inspiration to build something WOW. But now I have it. So lets start to do crazy beauty! I want to start a blog about my new upcomig custom rig. This build would be a hybrid between professional and gaming pc. This system would be within unique custom modded giant case, with crazy watercooling, only black color with tons of RGB and with huge triple professional monitor setup! It names...
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We have two 8-core CPUs: One at 105W, the other at 95W – But those numbers are completely arbitrary. Let’s test them and see for ourselves which will heat up faster! Buy a Core i9-9900K: On Amazon: https://geni.us/A7fMnMq On Newegg: https://lmg.gg/8KVmd Buy a Ryzen 7 3800X: On Amazon: https://geni.us/c8jRoGK On Newegg: https://lmg.gg/8KVmy