AMD Ryzen™ Efficient Community Plan

You do you...

"Ryzen 5000 series CPUs do not require a special Ryzen Power Profile, so it is not installed with Chipset driver package. Please use the Windows Balanced Power Profile for these procesors. Previous generation Ryzen processors will continue to use the Ryzen Balanced Power Profile for optimal performance and this is included in the Chipset driver package."
Yeah and the build in MS balanced profile is still not tailored towards the 5000 series, it is actually not good for propper power savings nor quick jumps to turbo frequencies.
And ytf do you quote the same thing again? Parrot much?
 
Last edited:
The manufacturer of the product states which power profile is best to use for its product (the 5000 series). You seem to completely ignore this fact; which is kinda funny
 
The manufacturer of the product states which power profile is best to use for its product (the 5000 series). You seem to completely ignore this fact; which is kinda funny
Yup, a manufacturer delivering a product plagued with WHEA errors and very high temperature spikes even with custom water loops with the higher end of the 5000 series processors.
With Windows 10 21H1's balanced power plan my 5800X get's stuck at max boost clock even while idle, there is no reason to keep a CPU at max frequency when it basically does nothing at all.
While the build in balanced power plan work fine with older AMD as old and new Intel CPU's it's still not good for a 5000 processor, regardless of that someone at AMD thinks that one size fits all.
Hence why it's best either to modify the power saver plan or use the ones provided in the thread at overclock.net
Using a combination of the snappy balanced and ultimate plans gives the best boost on demand while using an adjusted power saver plan gives an overall cooler CPU and less power used, but one still needs to tame PBO which can vary between motherboards and CPU's.
 
Last edited:
Back
Top Bottom