The motherboard is Lenovo B550, and I don't know what the problem is with Lenovo's after-sales service
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yyunfeng, nice to see the screenshots but it would be even nicer if they were in English. What is the complaint?
John.
Did your Lenovo system originally come with the 5700X3D processor, or did you upgrade it?
OEM system builders like Lenovo rarely release BIOS updates to support CPU upgrades.
yyunfeng, nice to see the screenshots but it would be even nicer if they were in English. What is the complaint?
John.
thankyou verymuch.
Did your Lenovo system originally come with the 5700X3D processor, or did you upgrade it?
OEM system builders like Lenovo rarely release BIOS updates to support CPU upgrades.
Lenovo system originally come with the 5800 processor,I upgrade it,you are right,because lenovo have no new bios
i have it on a b350 motherboard
If you're seeing it hit a 41.5x multiplier under load that is working as designed.
The 5700X3D specs show a boost speed up to 4100MHz.
https://www.techpowerup.com/cpu-specs/ryzen-7-5700x3d.c3437
FunkZ, I do no know what gto_pro is showing us a 5700X for but I do not think it is useful for the OP's problem. John.
I think that is to show what a "normal" 5700X3D looks like in CPU-Z.
Note the "Specification" field identifies it as a 5700X3D just like the OP. But yet clocks are boosting higher, up to 4.1 as designed.
Still waiting on an answer from OP if the Lenovo system originally came with the 5700X3D or if it was upgraded.
FunkZ, you are correct, missed that. I would say CPU-Z has a bug. What is the number in CPU-Z "This Processor", some kind of score? John.
CPU-Z includes a basic benchmark feature that assigns a score for single and multi thread CPU workloads. Scoring seems to be based primarily on frequency and does not benefit from L3 cache. My 5700X scores 6730 multi and my 5700G (which has half the cache, but slightly higher boost) scores 6750 multi.