Japp.. en stum vcore oavsett load är nog orealistiskt.
Men nu fick jag reda på att den ligger på ~50c efter 1 timma AIDA64 .. helt OK. Den spårade ur rätt omgående i Prime. AIDA bör väl vara det närmaste man kommer rätt vanligt användande.
Fyndade detta iallafall
"Thermal Testing:
Prime95 version 26.6 Small FFT's is ideal for testing processor core temperatures because;
(1) It more closely replicates Intel's laboratory TDP load than any other utilities.
(2) It is a steady-state 100% workload which provides non-fluctuating temperatures.
(3) Only a 10 minute test is needed to achieve results.
Stability Testing:
Prime95 Small FFT's in any version is no longer the best choice for stability testing because;
(1) It requires an excessive amount of time (often many hours) to verify processor stability.
AVX Stress Testing:
As previously mentioned in this thread, Asus discourages the the use of Prime95 versions later than 26.6 due to the excessive motherboard amperage load that must be sustained for several hours, typical of Small FFT's testing.
Intel also discourages the use of Prime95 versions later than 26.6 for similar reasons.
So here's the bottom line:
(1) If you overclock and game, and DON'T run apps which use AVX code, there's no need to test for it, because a higher stable overclock can be reached while keeping sustained core temperatures under 80C.
(2) If you overclock and DO run apps (commonly encoding tasks) which use AVX / AVX2 / FMA3 code, it often requires a lower overclock and Vcore to keep sustained core temperatures under 80C.
Regardless, all installed games and apps should be run to verify stability, and to also verify that sustained core temperatures are under 80C.
The best AVX utility for stability testing is Asus RealBench. It's a fluctuating workload which runs also provides core temperatures within a degree or two of Prime95 v26.6 Small FFT's."