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Quote:Originally Posted byOh i read that. But all they really said was CC6 cant be measured by normal means. CC1 2 and 3 can be measured. 1 is what we are setting for our pstate overclocks. 2's default for 1800x is 3200 at like 1.2v or so. 3 is 2200 at .9 volt. THOSE can be measured, and are being shown whenever minimum processor state is further below 90%. at 90% there is no indication of downclocking or downvolting whatsoever.Below 3 is 400mhz at 0(the unmeasurable!)v, which is pretty much when your pc goes to sleep. That of course is never seen in monitoring software, since the pc is dead when its at that level.But it doesn't say that only CC6 can't be measured. They are in separate paragraphs as well. And they appear to state that all 6 states work. Also, if its really stuck at 90%, then other than CC1, none of the other CC states would be working. The fact that the processor even decreases a little bit means that it is not stuck at 90% and it may switch through the CC states too quickly for measurements.Quote:Now that you know a little more about the performance of our new plan, let’s talk power. The AMD Ryzen Balanced power plan does not change how our processor handles low-power idle states called “CC-States.” These CC-States number cc1 through cc6, representing increasingly aggressive clock and power gating. In fact, cc6 represents a core that is essentially turned off. The core is sleeping so deeply that only its voltage can be detected by software.The sophisticated power management technology in the “Zen” core can autonomously enter and exit these CC-States as quickly as 1ms. Software tools, unable to see through the sleep, will simply report the last P-state known to the OS. Don’t be alarmed! The effective frequency of a sleeping core is much lower (generally sub-1GHz).Does not only state CC6. It states entered a CC-state.