Thanks. I really didn't want to be the one to have to post thatJust be aware, 13th Gen and 14th Gen intel are structurally unsound and deteriorating fast
Intel 13th and 14th Gen confirmed defective
Uh oh, reports coming in about 13th and 14th gen mobile cpus starting to get odd crashes https://www.tomshardware.com/pc-components/cpus/intel-says-13th-and-14th-gen-mobile-cpus-are-crashing-but-not-due-to-the-same-bug-as-desktop-chips-chipmaker-blames-common-software-and-hardware-issues...www.pcspecialist.co.uk
I would cancel the order, you can do so without any reason within 14 days of delivery.Erm, oh dear.
Me; here’s my dream pc that I saved up for!!
Everyone else; yeah, that’s gonna break.
😭😭😭
I’m not sure I understood everything in the how to protect your i9 posts 😬 do I need to do anything?
@Rossi01 this may seem drastic, and the responses you've got really aren't to put a downer on your PC build. There's nothing worse than when you're happy with something and other people don't have the same reaction. However, these Intel CPU's really are broken, and we've only really seen how much so in the last week or so.I would cancel the order, you can do so without any reason within 14 days of delivery.
Then I would wait until 9000 series AMD release on 15th, that will far outperform the 14900KS especially since your cooling isn't sufficient for it anyway so it will be constantly thermal throttling, so you'd never be able to achieve the available performance even if it didn't degrade.
You can get a far better system, just cancel it. They are defunct processors, extremely expensive for poor performance and broken by all accounts anyway at a structural level.
There is no 'fix'.There is supposed to be a fix coming down the line in a couple of weeks by way of a BIOS update but the way Intel have been behaving around this I would not hold your breath. As the others have said - AMD is where it's at at the moment.
But that’s the point, the voltage correction won’t solve the issue, it will merely increase the deterioration time, the architecture, the bridge between the ecores and pcores is substandard.Where CPUs are so far undamaged, (new or run with cautious settings - though that's no guarantee) the microcode should resolve the voltage issue (believe it when you see it) but then you still need to set limits to not exceed 253W (or whatever the correct figure is) as the MB manufacturers (with Intel's blind eye - or maybe approval) were able to ignore any limits. Hopefully things will be different going forward with how badly Intel have been burned - but again not holding my breath.