During high-action fights on the mountain, my core temps would hit 94℃, causing the clock to plummet from 4.2GHz to 3.4GHz. You can actually feel the performance drop. The VRM cooling on the Maxsun B850M just hits a thermal saturation point where the heat piles up around the chokes and can't escape. I tried lowering the 'Maximum Processor State' in Windows, which dropped temps by 4℃ but cost me 12 FPS—that just made me want to try a more aggressive undervolt. I went into the BIOS, dropped the CPU core voltage to 1.12V, and switched my case fans from 'Silent' to 'Performance' mode. My monitoring panel now shows core temps between 74-80℃ and the frequency is much tighter at 3.9-4.1GHz. I did get a boot loop after the first undervolt attempt, so I had to bump it back up to 1.15V for total stability. VRM temps are now 82-88℃. I switched the performance profile to 'Extreme' in the software, and it's finally holding steady. Core temps are staying at 74-80℃. Last updated onApril 5, 2026 6:53 PM.
When sneaking through the shadows, that feeling of fluid motion is everything. The Gigabyte GeForce RTX 5060 WINDFORCE 8G was pumping out frames that jumped wildly between 75-110 FPS, while my monitor was locked at 144Hz. This created a sync gap of 12-20ms, leading to obvious horizontal tearing. I first tried enabling V-Sync in-game, but the input lag shot up to over 40ms, making the controls feel sluggish and heavy. I knew I had to fix this at the driver level. I went into the NVIDIA Control Panel, forced G-Sync Compatible mode, and manually capped the max frame rate at 141 FPS. In RTSS, the frame time variance collapsed from 10-25ms to a smooth 6.8-7.5ms. After the first G-Sync tweak, I noticed some slight brightness flickering, which only went away after I updated the drivers and disabled the overlays. VRAM usage is now between 6.2-7.1GB and core temps are at 61-67°C. The tearing is completely gone, and the sync mode is finally working. Memory temps are steady at 58-63°C. Last updated onApril 9, 2026 10:21 AM.
When moving quickly through crowds, the core clock started fluctuating randomly, leaving me with about 100ms of input lag. It felt like I was playing through molasses. The default 4800MHz on the ADATA ValueRAM is way too conservative, causing the CPU memory controller throughput to wobble between 35-42GB/s. I tried 'Game Mode' in Windows, which cleared some background noise, but the latency was still there. I decided to get a bit more aggressive in the BIOS, nudging the frequency to 4850MHz and bumping the voltage from 1.1V to 1.15V. My monitoring panel showed read/write latency dropping from 95ns to 82-88ns, and the scene transitions finally smoothed out. I did hit a blue screen on the first try, so I had to loosen the timings from 40-40-40 to 42-42-42 to get it stable. Temps sat between 48-55℃. Switched the mode from 'Standard' to 'Enhanced' in the software, and the scheduling is finally sorted. Last updated onApril 5, 2026 4:21 PM.
I'm getting frame drops in BioShock 4 because my Valkyrie V360 pump speed is fluctuating. Help?
AI FiltersWatching the effects explode on screen is great, but the frame stability was a mess. The Valkyrie V360 Dracula's 'smart' pump strategy is way too slow to react to burst loads, causing my CPU to spike from 60℃ to 92℃ in a single second, which triggers an immediate clock drop. I tried the 'Silent' mode in the software, but that just led to a thermal shutdown—a total fail. I went straight into the BIOS and locked the pump speed at 100% full blast, and set the radiator fans to hit 80% once the CPU touches 60℃. In AIDA64 stress tests, the core temp dropped from 90℃ to a steady 68-74℃, and my 1% lows jumped from 25 FPS to 52 FPS. I did notice a slight humming resonance after locking the pump, but swapping the radiator screws fixed the vibration. Water temps are now a steady 32-38℃. The thermal response time is night and day compared to before. Cooling mode switch successful. Last updated onApril 5, 2026 8:31 AM.
Moving fast through the city ruins caused my core temps to skyrocket to 92℃, which forced the clock to drop from 4.0GHz to 3.2GHz. You can really feel the performance dip. The VRM on the Onda A520 hit a thermal saturation point where the heat just pooled around the inductors. I tried limiting the maximum processor state in Windows, but while it saved 5℃, I lost about 15 FPS—which actually made me excited to try some hardcore undervolting. I went into the BIOS, dropped the CPU core voltage to 1.1V, and switched the chassis fans from 'Silent' to 'Performance' mode. The monitoring panel showed core temps stabilizing at 72-78℃, with frequency fluctuations narrowing to 3.8-4.0GHz. I hit a snag where the system rebooted during boot-up after the first undervolt, but bumping it back to 1.12V made it perfectly stable. VRM temps are now 85-91℃. Switched the performance profile to 'Extreme' via the software, and it's finally behaving. Last updated onMarch 29, 2026 5:34 PM.