It turns out that 13th and 14th generation Intel processors have serious instability problems. A new test confirms this as well.
05.05.2024 – April was perhaps one of the most unpleasant months for Intel in recent years. Users have been complaining of instability issues since the 13th generation. However, many people guessed that an Nvidia card error might be behind this. They were right to think so, as most games disqualify players with video memory-related error messages. However, the dice rolled big when Nvidia became the official company In their position He stated that it is best to look for the reasons from the processor manufacturer.
In the few days after the scandal broke, it became clear that Intel processors with duplicate clock signals and consumption are less susceptible to freezes and instability. For this very reason, the company blames the motherboard manufacturers for what happened. According to Intel, the cause of instability is nothing but overly optimistic settings of the motherboards. These clock, consumption and voltage settings do not limit the processors at any level. Thanks to this, the temperature of the chips practically rises or takes on voltage values at which the chips begin to fail. By the first days of May, several popular motherboard manufacturers had already come forward with more restrictive profiles.
Testing of Intel processors had a sad result – isn't that the problem?
the WCCFTech The team came across a really interesting quiz on Chiphell's website, which… Kamdaka to make. Hundreds of processors have recently passed through his hands, as he runs a studio that needs a lot of computers. He didn't need much more, as he tested the original “auto” profiles, new, more restrictive reduced profiles, and even made the processors sweat the “weaker” B760/B660 cards. The following results were presented:
- Intel Core i9-13900K “Auto-253W” – 40/50% – Only 4/5 copies out of 10 were stable
- Intel Core i9-13900K “Low Load Line” – 50-60% – Only 5/6 copies out of 10 were stable
- Intel Core i9-13900K “B760/B660 Board” – 60-70% – Only 6/7 copies out of 10 were stable
- Intel Core i9-14900K “Automatic – 253W” – 20% – Only 2 copies out of 10 were stable
- Intel Core i9-14900K “Low Load Line” – ~30% – Only 3 copies out of 10 were stable
- Intel Core i9-14900K “Board B760/B660” – 40% – Only 4 copies out of 10 were stable
It is clear that the situation has not improved much with the new, more conservative situation. It seems that Intel will have to dig deeper into the bug phenomenon, and in the meantime it is worth trying to reduce the clocks for affected users.
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