Question BOTTOM 1% 5900x CPU Profile Score?

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Sep 24, 2022
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When I run the CPU Profile score on 3DMark, I get BOTTOM 1%, which I know isn't good haha.
Not only that, but I also get a really poor Time Spy score (I'm guessing because my cpu score is so low).

I'm not into specifics when it comes to PCs, although I did build this one (and 4 others) but they are all cookie-cutter builds. I have an older 7700k 3080 pc that runs just as well, if not better than this (as far as CPU goes). So in reality, I have no idea what to look for other than the basics.

User Benchmark: https://www.userbenchmark.com/UserRun/55471960
CPU Profile 3DMark Test: https://www.3dmark.com/cpu/728343
Time Spy 3DMark Test: https://www.3dmark.com/spy/30839362

CPU-Z CPU Tab: https://pasteboard.co/hasLgJ6mLxMD.png
CPU-Z Memory Tab: https://pasteboard.co/BQEuDqwas9yu.png
CPU-Z SPD Tab: https://pasteboard.co/yLfewQF0ProW.png

Specs:
ASUS ROG Crosshair VIII Dark Hero
AMD Ryzen 9 5900X 12-Core Processor
EVGA 3090 FTW3 Ultra Graming
iCUE H150i ELITE CAPELLIX Liquid CPU Cooler
Corsair CMH32GX4M2D3600C18 4x16GB (I use 64gb because rendering)
Samsung 980 Pro NVMe PCIe M.2 1TB

-Shows running mem frequency as 3200mhz ddr4
-AGESA Version: ComboPIv2_1200
-BIOS Version is default from 1/2021, I'm afraid to update it (could this be the reason?)

--
Target CPU Speed: 3700mhz
Target DRAM Frequency: 3200mhz
Target FCLK Frequency: 1600mhz

CPU Frequency: 3700mhz
Temp: 48C
Core Voltage: 1.481v
Memory Frequency: 3200mhz
Voltage: 1.344v
--

I have tried looking up specifics about RAM and whatnot, but it's all fairly confusing to me from an overview standpoint.

Any help is appreciated! :)
 
Sep 24, 2022
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What curve optimizer does is to lower the voltage at the high end of the V/F performance curve of the CPU core, the highest frequency end. It might do nothing at the low end and very little in the middle.

Yes, -30 is VERY high, probably too high for your gold star cores which already have a steep negative voltage offset from the factory. But since you're testing with a heavy load it's not changing the voltage much since the CPU is operating in the middle of it's performance curve. You have to test with a light, bursty load that makes each core boost to it's maximum clocks repeatedly. There's a tool called Core Cycler, go looking for that. It sets up a light, bursty load and cycles it through each core multiple times. When it crashes on a core, that's the one you have to reduce the negative offset a few points.

It's one of the better tools to see if you've lowered too much, but another one is simply gaming. Gaming is inherently light and bursty so it will crash an unstable core, usually resulting in a BSOD. The problem with that is figuring out which core crashed, but there is a way.

Tweaking in extreme CO undervolts can be hard, that's why most folks just dial in a -10 or -12 on all cores and call it a day. But also, pay attention to the PPT, TDC and especially EDC settings for best performance. EDC in particular can be counter-intuitive in that lowering it 10A or 20A from stock can improve performance in heavy workloads.

This is all great information. I appreciate you sticking with me throughout. I have learned so much from you over the past few days. I downloaded Core Cycler and it's currently running. It already threw an error on one of the CPUs (the second fastest cpu not the gold star one), but I'll probably have to run this test overnight for multiple iterations.

https://pasteboard.co/k88lqVWCMB9o.png

I'll definitely lower it from -30 to -15 for all of them regardless, just to see where it stands at that point. I do game a lot, so I'm sure I'll find out if it's unstable or not very quickly :LOL: then eventually once I figure out the appropriate curve, I'll apply all of these settings in the BIOS so I can stop running Ryzen Master.