that depend on the room temp. the that accurate, that some good idle temp.
what about when it on load?
that depend on the room temp. the that accurate, that some good idle temp.
what about when it on load?
look good.
is the motherboard bios,chipset driver, windows up to date?
on a old system. if it working, I wouldn't worry about it.
the problem is task manager.
again if it working, don't mess with it
it is power saving, if you don't want it, go to power profile and change it
The CPU is variable speed and Windows can reduce or increase the clock speed as needed. In your CPU, which is an older model, the number of different speed settings it has to work with is pretty low, so you see the clock speed jump around a lot. This is normal.
It's not an issue but is an OC. Ivy-Bridge cpus were alone in the ability to OC 400MHz above factory. Somewhere in bios you have a Performance mode set which applied that OC. It's basically boosted your base and turbo speeds.
Leave idle speeds alone. It'll automatically (Intel speed step) reduce speeds and temps and useage to a low power level at idle, in preparation for sleep modes. Idle is just that, not doing anything, so pushing an unused cpu is just adding heat and wasting power.
As soon as anything is done, even as little as moving the mouse, you'll move from idle to awake and the cpu will be at whatever maximum it needs to use with whatever cores it needs to use.