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Intel cpu turbo boost works weird. How can I fix it?
In general, the processor, with a long load of all 10 cores, runs at a frequency of 3.10. There are no cooling or power issues. I looked on the Internet and it says that my percent can be boosted up to 4.6 on all cores and up to 5 with something on one, and in fact, at the first + -30 seconds of full loading of all cores, it gives out these 4.6, and then the frequency drops to 3.10 and is already stable. So I don’t understand if this is a broken turbo boost, or if I’m doing something wrong. Or maybe you need to turn on something so that the 4.6 I need is stable. I also read somewhere that processors have the so-called long tdp and short tdp, and in fact I begin to believe in it, because these concepts well describe the behavior of my processor, which I described above. So I hope that someone will tell me what the problem is and tell me what to do.
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Everything works fine for you. The essence of turbo boost is precisely a short-term overclocking of the processor in order to smooth out peak loads. If you have a high load planned on an ongoing basis, then, of course, the processor cannot work in overclocked mode for a long time and returns to the standard frequency.
You can try the ditherig utility , it has the "Disable TDP limit" option.
You can configure the modes in the Intel® Extreme Tuning Utility in more detail
, but caution is required, if the settings are wrong, you can break the PC
That's the way it should be. It's basically a marketing gimmick, we'll give you a turbo boost, only you can't use it.
Theoretically, you can get into the BIOS and try to change the settings, or install software that will allow you to change the turbo boost time.
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