Metal Man 2
Member
When I check the highpermance power setting the cpu stays a little hotter and I have to adjust the fans. Just wondering if it was being slightly over clocked?

This is the OC Tuner with the balanced power setting in the first picture. The second pic is with the high performance button checked, also with nothing else running , just one tab for the forum same as before, and the overclocking needle is in the yellow and the temps are going up.
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then it overclocks back to 3.2 with checking the highperformence tab? How do you UNDERCLOCK from a point and then get back to that point with out overclocking?when it's running at 800Mhz it's underclocked.
then it overclocks back to 3.2 with checking the highperformence tab? How do you UNDERCLOCK from a point and then get back to that point with out overclocking?
let me try to explain this with some sort of analogy.
Say that there is an energy drink that allows you to run faster than you normally could. To put numbers to it, lets say the drink allows you to run 10 miles per hour, when your normal top speed is only 8 miles per hour.
So you don't tire yourself out, you dont run at full speed (8 miles per hour) everywhere. You may walk at 2 miles per hour. When needed, you are able to run your top speed of 8 miles per hour.
Only when you drink, you can go higher than your top speed, +2 miles per hour to be exact.
Similarly, in your computer, it has a NORMAL "top speed" which is your stock clock speed. In your case, it is 3.2 Ghz, as determined by your processor model. Your computer, in the Balanced Mode, is saying, " I dont need to be running at my top speed/top clock speed potential right now, I will UNDERCLOCK, or go my "walking" speed. When you select the High Performance mode, you tell your computer to go its top speed or, "running" speed.
An overclock would only mean when your computer runs over its top speed, or "running speed" similar to you drinking some energy drink, a computer can use a program or its BIOS to initiate a higher clock or "running" speed.
EDIT: Overclocking only refers to the faster clock speeds past your stock processing speed. It does not reflect the act of simply ramping up from a lower processing speed to your normal processing speed.
An analogy was going to be my next step, good explanation.
When your processor goes from 800mhz to 3200mhz it's just increasing the speed back to what it normally is. You seem to be confusing increasing the speed with overclocking. It is only overclocking if the speed achieved is higher than stock speeds. They are effectively the same, but mean two very different things.
If that and posts above don't clear things up, I'm hesitant to say it, but I call troll.
I know its running hotter because its running fasterIt's running hotter because it's running faster. To continue the analogy of the running speed, you'll make yourself a lot hotter running than you will walking, and the faster you run, the hotter you'll get, the same applies to computer components.
If it helps, try thinking of it as when you running it in balanced mode it runs 10*c cooler, rather than high performance makes it hotter. Those settings are designed with laptops in mind too, so you don't really need to use anything but high performance unless you're trying to cut back on your power bill![]()