![]() I'd buy, and eat a hat, if anyone's i5 8400 doesn't hit the 3.8GHz all core turbo, after all it boosts up to 4.0GHz on a single core, so all the cores need to do at least that speed, at one time or another. People look at the base clock of 2.8GHz and think, well that's pants, but if they know it's going to happily run at 3.8GHz all day long, why spend the extra $50 on the i5 8600 which has a 3.4GHz base clock, and 4.0GHz all core turbo? (i5 8600 numbers are just estimates) I read that it will be dynamic and going higher if the game I'm playing needs it but it will not go any higher than. I have tried everything in the bios to set it to 4ghz and nothing has changed. People question the reason why they stopped publishing all-core boost clocks, like it was some sort of conspiracy that there must be issues with the silicon, I'd be more inclined to say that they are trying to keep the 65w advertised TDP on these 6 cores chips, and also don't want to advertise just how fast they actually can be, reverse marketing in effect so chips that are better are still chosen as an option. Everywhere it says that the 8400 can be boosted to 4ghz yet its still at 2.8ghz. ![]() Now back into bios and disable EIST (Enhanced Intel SpeedStep), and Enable SpeedSHIFT. Open Command Prompt and type sc config ITBMService start disabled. Open Task Scheduler and disable Intel Turbo Boost Max Technology 3.0. The current 14nm process is very mature now, and the K chips are hitting 5.0GHz easily, the and the previous generation 7400/7500/7600 had no issues running at their respective boost speeds. RIght-click on the tray icon, and disable it. ![]() I'm unsure why people are of the idea that the 8400's will not turbo boost to 3.8GHz on all cores for every chip that is labelled as one by Intel.
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