Undervolting and Overclocking on Ivy Bridge
by Ian Cutress on April 23, 2012 12:15 PM EST- Posted in
- CPUs
- Intel
- Ivy Bridge
- Z77
In the past, overclocking a processor for ‘free’ performance involved taking a cheap model and pushing it past the top end model. In the land of Intel, overclocking by any significant margin has been limited to the more expensive processors – with Sandy Bridge it was common so see a 3.4GHz processor overclocked to 4.6GHz with very little ‘effort’ for those with overclocking experience.
However, Ivy Bridge is now released and behaves differently with regard to Sandy Bridge, in a couple of perhaps alarming ways that we think you should know about. We always want to be thorough here at AnandTech with our analysis, so this article is all about our results from Ivy Bridge overclocking – especially in terms of what to look out for. Ivy Bridge overclocking is a different beast to Sandy Bridge, so we want to make sure there are several clear correlations implanted in a users mind when it comes to a stable Ivy Bridge overclock. For our other readers, we also have some notes regarding some undervolting results on Ivy Bridge.
Undervolting and Overclocking on Ivy Bridge
During my testing of the Ivy Bridge and Panther Point platform, a few truths came alive regarding how the processor functions in the platform. Here we have the next generation processor, using a 22nm process and tri-gate technology, but still using the Sandy Bridge architecture. In that respect, performance is slightly improved due to the process change and minor tweaks, power consumption should be down due to the smaller process, and voltage required for the processor should be reduced due to the process and the new technology.
Regardless of what people may think, Sandy Bridge was quite an excellent overclocker if you got hold of the K-series processors. Almost every K-series processor had no trouble hitting 4.6GHz (from 3.3GHz to 3.5GHz) with a little increase in voltage, or if you pushed it a bit, most were able to handle 5.0GHz or more. Competitive overclockers were able to see 5.5GHz on air or up to 5.9GHz on sub-zero cooling if they had a processor capable of that speed. However, for a daily machine, 4.4GHz to 4.6GHz was a good overclock, or 5.0GHz on water was still happily within temperature limits.
There have been rumors around the internet that Ivy Bridge can be a vicious monster when overclocking – I have seen stories that it runs very hot when overclocked. There has been a mixture of testing methodology as well, and I would like to dispel any myths or correct any testing that may be incomplete here and now.
Below I will take you through numbers I have gathered during testing. But two things are certain:
- Ivy Bridge gets hot with voltage.
- Ivy Bridge behaves differently to Sandy Bridge.
The key to an Ivy Bridge overclock is a combination of a good processor speed increase with as little of an increase in the voltage as possible. You may think that this should be obvious, but with Sandy Bridge we were happily ramping up the volts and frequency freely until we hit that limit. This is not the case with Ivy Bridge, and I will show you why.
My results today will come in the format of several easy to read graphs (if you excuse the use of Excel). At each point I have taken the CPU temperature under load using PovRay, a real-world thrasher of CPUs, and power consumption using OCCT. The graphs come as follows:
- Stock CPU frequency, vary voltage
- 4.4GHz CPU frequency, vary voltage
- Constant 1.25 volts, vary CPU speed
- Constant 0.90 volts, vary CPU speed
With more time I could perhaps build a better landscape of results, however these have given a clear view of how Ivy Bridge likes to perform. For clarification, the setup for these results is:
Intel i7-3770K
Intel All-In-One Liquid Cooler
MSI Z77A-GD65
G.Skill 4x4GB 2400 9-11-11
OCZ 1250W Gold ZX Series (75% efficient at 50W+, 90%+ efficient at 250W+)
2x ASUS HD 7970 GPUs
I must also clarify that these results were on an open test bed. Inside a case, temperatures may be higher. The Intel All-In-One Liquid Cooler is by no means a substantial cooler, but it should perform better than a typical low-profile type air cooler.
Stock CPU Frequency, Vary Voltage
While it is not particularly surprising that an increase in voltage increases both temperature and power consumption, the rate of gain should be examined. At stock speeds, power draw increases by an average of 6W per 0.05 volts initially, moving up to 10W per 0.05 volts as we increase the voltage. With 0.35 extra volts in the processor the system moves from 112W under load to 168W – an increase of 50%. Temperature also rises quickly, from 53C at 0.90 volts to 80C at 1.25 volts.
There's also one more interesting piece of information. Our particular processor worked fine when undervolted to 0.900 volts, but at 0.850 volts it would not boot. As with all processors, your mileage may vary.
4.4GHz CPU Frequency, Vary Voltage
At a higher frequency, we can see both a leap in temperatures (especially safe temperatures) and power consumption based on voltage.
At 4.4GHz, we see that our chip is stable as low as 1.05 volts, which is around the stock voltage for this processor (or in other words, a free 500 MHz overclock). But what we see with increasing voltage is alarming. Temperatures very quickly gets north of 90C if automatic settings are not set at an appropriate level. It could be hazardous for system builders just to go straight to 1.200 volts and set a target speed without monitoring the long term effects (given dust and age, these temperatures may rise).
For the next set of results, I fix the voltage and vary the processor speed to observe the effect.
Constant 1.25 Volts, Vary CPU Speed
Given what we know already, it is perhaps unsurprising to see that the CPU at load runs at 77C while only at 3.3GHz in this 1.25 volts test. As we up the CPU speed, the temperature (and power draw) actually rise very slowly. At 4.5GHz, we see the temperature hit 90C, which in my book would be the absolute limit for a daily machine--I would even suggest nothing more than 80C to be safe).
This conclusively proves that if you want the best overclock for your machine, you cannot just choose a relative voltage and see how far it will go at that setting. Overclocking on Ivy Bridge needs to be methodical and done correctly so as to not introduce unnecessary heat into the system.
This brings us to the good news and bad news. The good news is that at stock settings, we have a cool and quiet processor with a nice low power draw. The bad news is that it perhaps will not overclock as well as people think it should. Those wishing for 4.8GHz at 1.4 volts (similar to Sandy Bridge) will run into a lot of issues if they think that 1.4 volts is appropriate for Ivy Bridge. In comparison, you may end up with something more reasonable like 4.6GHz at 1.1 volts, or 4.8GHz at 1.2 volts (as per some boards I have tested). Then it will be a case of deciding whether the small IPC gains that Ivy brings will be worth 200 MHz less on your CPU compared to Sandy Bridge.
My recommendation is that if you run an overclocked Sandy Bridge system right now, do not jump to Ivy Bridge. You may be severely disappointed by the overclocking performance. Ultimately, Ivy Bridge hates voltage. Moving the CPU speed up is not so bad in the case of temperatures and system power draw. What you need is the lowest voltage for the overclock you want. So when you overclock, be methodical.
Voltage and CPU Speed Correlation
Given what we found out above, I did some additional overclock testing. Starting at 0.900 volts, we achieved a maximum stable clock speed at 3.9GHz. By upping the voltage, we checked for the maximum stable overclock at each voltage, along with the temperature. Here are our results:
In the land of diminishing returns, more voltage is required for similar increases in CPU speed. In terms of temperature, it is easier to understand where the limits are going to be:
The increase of both voltage and processor frequency has a drastic effect on the peak temperature. Be wary of any overclocking results that are quoted at 1.3 volts! As always, your mileage my vary - I do not have another processor to compare with yet, so it's possible these results are poor in relation to retail samples.
A little note on underclocking….
There are others in the community who have been requesting information about the underclocking abilities of Ivy Bridge. I took some time to take readings similar to those above at a voltage below the stock voltage of my processor. Typically under load my processor has been running at 1.080 volts. The lowest voltage my processor would run at while under full load was 0.900 volts – anything lower would not boot properly. So at this voltage, I took some readings:
Ultimately, I was not able to overclock the processor a lot while undervolting it this much. Nevertheless, that decrease in voltage is sufficient to drive the temperature under load right down, even at an increased stock speed (3.9GHz on all cores). The potential to undervolt Ivy Bridge is there, and it will be interesting to see how Ivy Bridge overclocking and undervolting both develop over the coming months.
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MrSpadge - Monday, April 23, 2012 - link
If you shrink crystalline Si dimensions, heat conductivity breaks down as less phonon modes can fit into the volume and contribute to heat conductivity. For the fin-FET like tri-gate design this should be even more severe, as we're quenching the phonon modes in 2 dimensions. Might well be that the problem is to get the heat out of the transistors in Intels 22 nm process. If this is correct, things are only going to get worse at even smaller process nodes. The problem is then not about putting heat into the system, but rather to get it conducted even to the heat spreader or back side of the chip.zipz0p - Tuesday, April 24, 2012 - link
This is an interesting point. I hadn't thought of the fin-FET in this way before. You may have just hit the nail on the head, though.silverblue - Wednesday, April 25, 2012 - link
Apologies if this is a little out of left field, but isn't this something that AMD is hoping to tackle with resonant clock mesh technology?Spunjji - Thursday, April 26, 2012 - link
Lovely interpretation of the facts. Kudos to you.ceravis - Monday, April 23, 2012 - link
Thanks Ian, this is the first I've heard of these issues... I had been holding out for Ivy Bridge results before choosing between it and Sandy Bridge (which will hopefully now drop in price).This helps much.
Arnulf - Monday, April 23, 2012 - link
"Then it will be a case of deciding whether the small IPC gains that Ivy brings will be worth 200 MHz less on your CPU compared to Ivy Bridge."Did you mean to say "... compared to Sandy Bridge." ?
klmccaughey - Monday, April 23, 2012 - link
Ian, could you confirm please whether or not the GPU was active in these tests? Someone asked the question but you maybe missed it? Thanks, KevinCeriseCogburn - Thursday, May 3, 2012 - link
It was not active and yes you missed Ian's reply noting that, as did the article, with 2x 79xx.DParadoxx - Monday, April 23, 2012 - link
I'm interested in seeing how things go if you disable HT and graphics.MrSpadge - Monday, April 23, 2012 - link
Not much change, just a little less cpu performance, power consumption and temperature.