- Jun 10, 2004
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Regarding idle voltages and idle temps.
1) These chips are on 7nm, and have a tiny die surface area (~30mm^2 for cores per chiplet!). This means even at iso-power, the thermal density is much higher versus the comparable 14nm chip = observed higher temps and hot spots. Can't beat physics.
2) The chip clocks up and down in 1ms intervals under the new Ryzen power plans introduced with chipset driver 1.07. The behavior of Ryzen 3000 series is to "race to idle" meaning it clocks up as quickly and as high as possible to complete a task in order to finish it using the least amount of total energy possible. This means that you can observe very "spiky" voltages and temperatures. This is *normal* and expected behavior. This also means that your software you are using to capture clocks and voltages is likely only correct for a millisecond snapshot (if that) and doesn't reflect the true clocks or temps of your chip. If you aren't seeing 1.49V+ and you aren't thermal throttling, I wouldn't worry about it just yet. I have yet to thermal throttle even on extended AVX2 loads.
Now that said, BIOSes are definitely immature and there are a lot of bugs (boost clocks, IF desyncing beyond 3200 on Auto/XMP settings on non-X570 boards, etc) that need squashing, but I'm sure the low-hanging fruit will be addressed within days if not weeks.
If the thought of waiting a few weeks nauseates you, I would recommend you wait for a sale (e.g. Black Friday) before you upgrade. Not only will you save money, you'll probably get some nice performance boosts over launch day reviews from the improvements coming over the next few months.
1) These chips are on 7nm, and have a tiny die surface area (~30mm^2 for cores per chiplet!). This means even at iso-power, the thermal density is much higher versus the comparable 14nm chip = observed higher temps and hot spots. Can't beat physics.
2) The chip clocks up and down in 1ms intervals under the new Ryzen power plans introduced with chipset driver 1.07. The behavior of Ryzen 3000 series is to "race to idle" meaning it clocks up as quickly and as high as possible to complete a task in order to finish it using the least amount of total energy possible. This means that you can observe very "spiky" voltages and temperatures. This is *normal* and expected behavior. This also means that your software you are using to capture clocks and voltages is likely only correct for a millisecond snapshot (if that) and doesn't reflect the true clocks or temps of your chip. If you aren't seeing 1.49V+ and you aren't thermal throttling, I wouldn't worry about it just yet. I have yet to thermal throttle even on extended AVX2 loads.
Now that said, BIOSes are definitely immature and there are a lot of bugs (boost clocks, IF desyncing beyond 3200 on Auto/XMP settings on non-X570 boards, etc) that need squashing, but I'm sure the low-hanging fruit will be addressed within days if not weeks.
If the thought of waiting a few weeks nauseates you, I would recommend you wait for a sale (e.g. Black Friday) before you upgrade. Not only will you save money, you'll probably get some nice performance boosts over launch day reviews from the improvements coming over the next few months.