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Auto VS OffSEt voltage

Go to solution Solved by SolarNova,

Generaly a manual voltage is a static voltage.

a offset voltage is what it sounds, it applies a voltage offset to the voltage curve.

Auto ..is ..auto.

 

For pure stability at very high levels of OCing , manual is best.

For non extreme OCing a offset voltage is better for every day use as it allows the CPU to downclock and downvolt when idle.

Auto usually gives the CPU more voltage than it needs to ensure stock stability at the expensive of usually drawing more power and causing more heat than it necessarily needs to.

If you not set the voltage to manual do you set it to auto or offset ( with + or - values)?
I have 3900x and Asus Rog strix x570-f,
I notes that offset -0.1 voltage I get a bit higher score in ciniebench r20 (about 120p more) but I read somewhere that we should not under voltage T
I am in 1404 update I manage to update via internet in bios and I got the latest as it's not available yet on web.
Another question here Which monitor to belive more Razen Master or HWInfo 64 as Rayzen show a bit higher voltage!!

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Check temps with ryzen master and voltage with CPU-Z. Aim for lowest voltage that is stable and gets you temps you are comfortable with.

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Generaly a manual voltage is a static voltage.

a offset voltage is what it sounds, it applies a voltage offset to the voltage curve.

Auto ..is ..auto.

 

For pure stability at very high levels of OCing , manual is best.

For non extreme OCing a offset voltage is better for every day use as it allows the CPU to downclock and downvolt when idle.

Auto usually gives the CPU more voltage than it needs to ensure stock stability at the expensive of usually drawing more power and causing more heat than it necessarily needs to.

CPU: Intel i7 3930k w/OC & EK Supremacy EVO Block | Motherboard: Asus P9x79 Pro  | RAM: G.Skill 4x4 1866 CL9 | PSU: Seasonic Platinum 1000w Corsair RM 750w Gold (2021)|

VDU: Panasonic 42" Plasma | GPU: Gigabyte 1080ti Gaming OC & Barrow Block (RIP)...GTX 980ti | Sound: Asus Xonar D2X - Z5500 -FiiO X3K DAP/DAC - ATH-M50S | Case: Phantek Enthoo Primo White |

Storage: Samsung 850 Pro 1TB SSD + WD Blue 1TB SSD | Cooling: XSPC D5 Photon 270 Res & Pump | 2x XSPC AX240 White Rads | NexXxos Monsta 80x240 Rad P/P | NF-A12x25 fans |

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1 hour ago, SolarNova said:

Generaly a manual voltage is a static voltage.

a offset voltage is what it sounds, it applies a voltage offset to the voltage curve.

Auto ..is ..auto.

 

For pure stability at very high levels of OCing , manual is best.

For non extreme OCing a offset voltage is better for every day use as it allows the CPU to downclock and downvolt when idle.

Auto usually gives the CPU more voltage than it needs to ensure stock stability at the expensive of usually drawing more power and causing more heat than it necessarily needs to.

Thank you for the explanation, so we can say the offset starts from the auto voltage and we can offset it? or where it's starts?

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27 minutes ago, MoSaber said:

Thank you for the explanation, so we can say the offset starts from the auto voltage and we can offset it? or where it's starts?

To keep things simple ... lets say 'yes' :)

CPU: Intel i7 3930k w/OC & EK Supremacy EVO Block | Motherboard: Asus P9x79 Pro  | RAM: G.Skill 4x4 1866 CL9 | PSU: Seasonic Platinum 1000w Corsair RM 750w Gold (2021)|

VDU: Panasonic 42" Plasma | GPU: Gigabyte 1080ti Gaming OC & Barrow Block (RIP)...GTX 980ti | Sound: Asus Xonar D2X - Z5500 -FiiO X3K DAP/DAC - ATH-M50S | Case: Phantek Enthoo Primo White |

Storage: Samsung 850 Pro 1TB SSD + WD Blue 1TB SSD | Cooling: XSPC D5 Photon 270 Res & Pump | 2x XSPC AX240 White Rads | NexXxos Monsta 80x240 Rad P/P | NF-A12x25 fans |

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