![]() ![]() Only deal with others if you know exactly what they do (you can't break your system, but you can make it slower)Ģ) I already explained why the gigabyte overclocking is bad (voltages)Ĥ) No, not joking, it is probably the source of the spikes if your drivers are up to date.ġ) Again as I said, changing profile on XTU is the same as changing Windows profiles. Nothing more.ġ) Windows power profiles work perfectly in the default (balanced) setting. It's a program by Intel, so how will it actually fry my CPU? Is it badly coded?Īlso, I don't have anything installed at all, this is a clean machine I am talking about. ![]() I just installed it because it came with the Gigabyte motherboard's drivers. Changing profiles it in it seems to be just changing Windows power profiles only. I don't use it at all as I am not intending to overclock my CPU. Try making sure to clean out all the crap you installed, especially logging applications that aren't useful except for debugging systems. For it to do that spike though, you must have something running in the background that's not very CPU friendly. ![]() The spikes are perfectly normal though, it's called "hurry up and wait", which basically means the chips will spike to 100% for a split second, get everything done, then go back to low idle states. Don't use that utility unless you want to fry your CPU, it tends to overestimate required voltages and might harm your CPU. ![]()
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