If ECO Mode only sets those 3 variables and we know their values, setting them even without having the ECO preset should be just as stable as stock. When you want to run something headless in a corner for months without having to troubleshoot why it keeps hanging, having it on a 45W (or even...
I'm guessing that lowering the max temperature will cause it to end (or at least tone down) its boost windows sooner.
The wattage limit will mean all/most-core workloads will run at lower frequencies, while single/light-threaded workloads will boost about the same.
@Gideon As far as I understand, the difference between ECO / PPT-TDC-EDC on one side and Curve Optimizer on the other, is that the former is supposed to be validated by AMD, but the latter falls to the customer to verify stability, doesn't it?
@Gideon thank you for the info. Those are indeed for the higher TDP SKUs. My question was for the non-X parts that are already spec-ed at 65W, can you get them lower?
Does anyone have a non-X AM5 CPU that can look in the bios to see if ECO mode setting is available, and if it is does it do anything?
Any ECO Mode info I found was for CPUs ending in X.
On AM4 APUs, you could ECO Mode them from 65W down to 45W, which was useful for a system that you intended to...
@Markfw Don't use the chipset drivers from Asus' website. Get them directly from AMD.
And keep an eye on bios release notes. I remember on AM4 the fix was through newer bioses and it was specifically mentioned in the release notes. To be honest, even if they don't list it in the changelog I...
So I have an Athlon 300GE on an Asrock B450 Pro4 running as a home server. Everything works fine except one feature: it does not power on after a power outage, despite setting the bios option for it.
I'm thinking maybe it's a bug in the old bios it is running, so I'm looking at updating it.
The...
Thank you for your replies.
I am going to stick to 65W parts because this is an old board and it was cheap at the time, so I don't want to put too much load on those modest VRMs. If I can put a Zen3 in there, then I'll get a 5600X or 5700X. If not, I'll get a 3700X.
But the reason why I want...
I have an 1800X on Asrock AB350 Pro4 and I'd like to upgrade the CPU to the newest generation the motherboard can take.
On the Asrock "CPU support list" page for this motherboard, there are only 1000, 2000 and 3000 series CPUs listed.
However, looking at the BIOS descriptions on the downloads...
Wow that's a beefy card for sure!
2.5X improvement in ray tracing? Hmm...
But does it run Solitaire with reflections off of glossy cards?
Seriously now, how does it perform in the games you play?
I voted for 6800XT also as most people before me.
Firstly, I upgraded to a 6750XT a few weeks before and am quite pleased with the doubling+ of performance compared to my old RX580 4GB. I don't game in 4K like you but if I did, I would have gotten the 6800XT. The 6750XT is simply not a 4K card...
That is good to know. Thanks!
I wonder if this is only for the Dell-branded cards or is it availble in the vanilla LSI firmware too. Or the HP, Fujitsu, etc flavors.
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