Installer Steam
log på
|
sprog
简体中文 (forenklet kinesisk)
繁體中文 (traditionelt kinesisk)
日本語 (japansk)
한국어 (koreansk)
ไทย (thai)
Български (bulgarsk)
Čeština (tjekkisk)
Deutsch (tysk)
English (engelsk)
Español – España (spansk – Spanien)
Español – Latinoamérica (spansk – Latinamerika)
Ελληνικά (græsk)
Français (fransk)
Italiano (italiensk)
Bahasa indonesia (indonesisk)
Magyar (ungarsk)
Nederlands (hollandsk)
Norsk
Polski (polsk)
Português (portugisisk – Portugal)
Português – Brasil (portugisisk – Brasilien)
Română (rumænsk)
Русский (russisk)
Suomi (finsk)
Svenska (svensk)
Türkçe (tyrkisk)
Tiếng Việt (Vietnamesisk)
Українська (ukrainsk)
Rapporter et oversættelsesproblem
Yes of course needs to stress test; for stability assurance purposes. Best to do that with Stress Test Tools and Benchmarks, rather then actual Games.
I can’t do undervolt as I am novice/noob
Yea I did it the first thing after booting the pc
- stability (xmp is not always stable if you are unlucky with silicon lottery)
- performance and if it matches general benchmarks
- temperatures and if cooling is properly installed.
unless the cpu has a damaged imc or board dose not support ram multiplier
And some profiles, like for 8000MT/s or faster, memory are very challenging to make it work stable and to pass every stress test.
higher speed is overclocking, but almost always works with 2 dimms at the rams xmp profile
stock voltage will be fine on it
undervolting is like overclocking
lower voltage = less stable and less heat
if you want to add gpu load use gpuz render test (click the [?] under amd/nvidia/intel logo)
I’m kind of happy with the temps, I get like as highest as 65-67 degrees running CPU heavy games like CS, using an DeepCool AK500 WH cooler
https://ibb.co/zVFLPqkg