
jorgeregula
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I tried playing around with the different variables available, to no avail. First thing I tried was to set the cache ratio, since this seems like the most reliable way to get a stable undervolt ( if the cache ratio is high I get BSOD immediately) (note, before attempting any I also enable the overclocking var 0x1D9) Tried it with both the - Ring Max OC Ratio (0x1E7) and - Max Ring Ratio Limit (0x211) And tried with both of them setting them to 37x (0x25 in hex). This causes the CPU and cache ratio to drop to 4x and a 0,4 Ghz on the E-cores and even lower on the P-cores... Since the max value for both var is 0x55 I don't think it is expressed in Mhz but in times x, so I don't know how else to set them. I have not touched the voltage offsets since if I can not change the cache ratio it will cause immediate BSOD I fear -- unless I start really low but that sort of beats the purpose 🙂
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Has anyone already tried undervolting by changing settings in the BIOS NVRAM? The parameters for voltage offset are there as well. Does this offer any advantages -- e.g. not being vulnerable to plundervolt? I have now applied the settings in Throttlestop using the normal method -125 mV on CPU core and CPU P cache - 90mV on CPU E cache Combined with the GPU power limit at 139% this gave me a 3DMark score of 11247 (10690 graphics and 15969 CPU). Score on stock was 10150, so I'm very happy with that increase! Final preference would be to stick the voltage offset changes in the BIOS. Searching through the dump that was provided here in the thread there are a couple of candidates. For reference I attached the same BIOS dump that @MyPC8MyBrain provided, but formatted for easier readability, using https://github.com/BoringBoredom/UEFI-Editor/releases Looking at the different options available, and combining this with the info from HWinfo It leads me to believe that we need : Processor P-core Voltage Offset | VarStore: CpuSetup, VarOffset: 0x1E0, Size: 0x2 Min: 0x0, Max: 0x3E8, Step: 0x1 Processor Offset Prefix | VarStore: CpuSetup, VarOffset: 0x1E2, Size: 0x1 +: 0x0 (default) -: 0x1 Ring Voltage Offset | VarStore: CpuSetup, VarOffset: 0x1EC, Size: 0x2 Min: 0x0, Max: 0x3E8, Step: 0x1 Ring Offset Prefix | VarStore: CpuSetup, VarOffset: 0x1EE, Size: 0x1 +: 0x0 (default) -: 0x1 E-core L2 Voltage Offset | VarStore: CpuSetup, VarOffset: 0x2B2, Size: 0x2 Min: 0x0, Max: 0x3E8, Step: 0x1 E-core L2 Configurations Offset Prefix | VarStore: CpuSetup, VarOffset: 0x2B4, Size: 0x1 +: 0x0 (default) -: 0x1 IFR_Formatted_Precision_7770.txt
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After installing the geforce drivers instead of professional drivers the power limit indeed unlocks. Setting it to +39% gives 125W GPU power usage instead of 102W on an RTX A4500. Ran an extra 3dmark run, graphics score went from 9700 to 10800, so that's great. However, now the CPU score has dropped from 13800 to 10500, and it seems to be thermally limiting. I guess my only options are undervolting / limiting boost to avoid this? Total system power usage shows as 235W.
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Same for the A4500, 102W. Anyone knows if there is anything to be done with Afterburner or Nvidia Inspector to improve performance within that power limit? The voltage curve in afterburner only starts at 1230 Mhz / 700 mV so there's not much room for undervolting I guess? Is there any way to reduce the idle power draw for the GPU? On my 7670 (12850HX, a4500) Timespy result is 10059.