Have you taken a performance hit by doing so?
I haven't benched to notice. But more than likely I have.
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Have you taken a performance hit by doing so?
on the other hand, in my house I have 2x 14th gen (14600k & 14900k) and 1x 13th gen (13700k) all of which have had a LOT of use without any issues at all.
I can't remember the video atm as I watched way too many of them but I think the latest bios update may cause a loss of around 4%.I haven't benched to notice. But more than likely I have.
Yes, it is baffling. I don't have a feeling that my CPU is suddenly going to go pop but obviously something is happening and there are problems. Fingers crossed they are all OK. The 13700k has been rinsed for over a year (with non safe bios versions) and seem as stable as ever. The 14600k since December with heavy use also.My immediate circle of friends and family have a few people with 13th and 14th gen, including people playing CS and various UE5 stuff, without any issues so far which weren't down to RAM problems or needing a BIOS update.
From my wider circle of acquaintances including people working in IT, etc. who manage 100s of such systems they are experiencing elevated issues with the 13th and 14th gen but as before it is low single digit percentage type stuff rather than massive failure rates. Interestingly the observation has been that initially most of the failures were out the box and the CPUs seen degrading have largely been the direct Intel replacements so far. Most of the CPUs which weren't faulty originally haven't gone on to degrade as of yet which is kind of weird.
I do wonder what is going on.
just backwards and forwards at the moment , arguing its goosed and fixes deminish advertised performance , waiting to hear back , told them id keep mobo and just sell on , im going back to amd asapThe 14600k has been getting hammered daily since Dec. The 14900k, only a couple of months - only ever used on the bios with the intel profiles on, recently updated to the 0*125 microcode update. I can't see any voltages that are untoward but I guess time will tell with this CPU. Pretty gutting as I bought it just at the time when all this dropped.
I got the 14900k new but from eBay, CPU only so if it did degrade I would have to get creative forging a receipt! Not ideal.
Shame about your CPU - are you planning to return it?
Wendell implied similar; that the RMA returns were as likely or more likely to develop a fault again.My immediate circle of friends and family have a few people with 13th and 14th gen, including people playing CS and various UE5 stuff, without any issues so far which weren't down to RAM problems or needing a BIOS update.
From my wider circle of acquaintances including people working in IT, etc. who manage 100s of such systems they are experiencing elevated issues with the 13th and 14th gen but as before it is low single digit percentage type stuff rather than massive failure rates. Interestingly the observation has been that initially most of the failures were out the box and the CPUs seen degrading have largely been the direct Intel replacements so far. Most of the CPUs which weren't faulty originally haven't gone on to degrade as of yet which is kind of weird.
I do wonder what is going on.
My guess would be something like this.What I cannot get my head around is that the RMA department (and DC customers probably have a sales rep - even if their 1x900K numbers were small they buy lots of other stuff) shipping out from bad batches. One off's are one thing but if the RMA batch keep failing over and over again, you would think the RMA department would test before sending them out. Assuming Intel know what to test for, of course...
Do you really think Intel cares about an individual going through RMA?Wendell implied similar; that the RMA returns were as likely or more likely to develop a fault again.
Now, motherboard/PSU/cooling issues which killed CPU could kill a replacement but W680 DC customers are unlikely to have had those issues.
So this point towards bad batches. Or bad batches being one of the problems.
What I cannot get my head around is that the RMA department (and DC customers probably have a sales rep - even if their 1x900K numbers were small they buy lots of other stuff) shipping out from bad batches. One off's are one thing but if the RMA batch keep failing over and over again, you would think the RMA department would test before sending them out. Assuming Intel know what to test for, of course...
In terms of customer perceptions: a CPU failing is bad. How the RMA gets handles is crucial, and receiving a bad replacement: well the customer perceptions will really suffer big time.
i could tell with the fps in games tbhHoeveel trager worden Intel-processors door de nieuwe 'Default Settings'?
Hoeveel langzamer worden processors zoals de Core i9 14900K door de nieuwe Intel Default Settings? Tweakers vergelijkt de benchmarkscores van voor en na de biosupdates.tweakers.net
i could tell with the fps in games tbh
At least you get updates, my EVGA Z790 KPE board no longer gets (official) updatesIntel's "situation" has certainly helped my Gigabyte Z690 motherboard enjoy many BIOS releases, not necessarily for welcomed reasons, performance goes up, performance goes down.........
They certainly managed to bring longevity to the Socket 1700, hopefully the same for their next one, with stability this time.
How does that even work? Eh. I mean, the whole reason for lowering the voltage was to prevent degradation, right? So, why would you turn it off so easily?Beware, the new Microcode doesn't work if you don't use the Intel Default Profile