solarliving 10 Posted September 16, 2013 I gained an average of 11 fps without lag spikes (from 25fps avg in A3 altis benchmark to 36) by using an app called ParkControl see http://bitsum.com/about_cpu_core_parking.php I7 930 6gb win7 64 HD7970 3gb VRAM mostly ultra settings 1600 overall visibility Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
ProbeEtPylon 1 Posted September 16, 2013 This software helped me, too. However, using parkcontrol causes a slightly higher cpu temperature in my case. Beware if your cpu allready gets dangerously hot! my cpu: Phenom II X4 955 Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
jumpinghubert 49 Posted September 16, 2013 I gained an average of 11 fps without lag spikes (from 25fps avg in A3 altis benchmark to 36) by using an app called ParkControl see http://bitsum.com/about_cpu_core_parking.phpI7 930 6gb win7 64 HD7970 3gb VRAM mostly ultra settings 1600 overall visibility I made another workaround to "unpark" all cores months ago and have great performance too. It might be a good tipp to log cpu-frequency during gameplay. Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Ezcoo 47 Posted September 16, 2013 (edited) You can also force the cores working on full speed also on lower usage levels very easily by using "Maximum Performance" power management mode in Windows. You can find the power management settings by typing eg. "power settings" in the Start menu search box. The "Maximum Performance" mode is the only right one to be used with PCs in practice anyway, the "Balanced" and "Power saving" modes are meant for laptops. However, on some PCs the "Maximum Performance" mode might be hidden, but it can be made visible via some menu there (don't remember how exactly). In addition, some motherboards might force the CPU powersaving on (=decreasing the clocks of cores that have low usage) despite of the Windows settings, and in those cases the powersaving mode should be disabled also via BIOS. Edit: whoops, I failed. It's true that even the Maximum Performance mode doesn't disable core parking, which is quite dumb... But it might still help by keeping the actually active cores working on full speed. Edited September 16, 2013 by Ezcoo Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Tyl3r99 41 Posted September 16, 2013 if more people say this works ill give this a go... but what exactly do I do? install and run and then run arma 3?? Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
jumpinghubert 49 Posted September 16, 2013 if more people say this works ill give this a go... but what exactly do I do? install and run and then run arma 3?? please look at first to your cpu-clock during gaming http://www.overclock.net/t/1229915/how-to-cpu-and-gpu-usage-along-with-fps-in-game Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
gvse 10 Posted September 16, 2013 Ha. I hope I wont be diverting the thread if I ask you this: Ive just taken a look at that cpu monitoring tool and I started wondering if there's any point in my overclocking the cpu if not a single thread is ever used beyond 80%? Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
jumpinghubert 49 Posted September 17, 2013 3.4GHZ @80% not the same as 4.4GHZ @80% Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
nerdwing 13 Posted September 17, 2013 No discernible change on an AMD Phenom II X4 970 @ 3.5ghz. Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Speederr 1 Posted September 17, 2013 No change for me :/ AMD 1090T 3.2ghz Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
mamasan8 11 Posted September 17, 2013 No change, dualcore 3.2 Ghz AMD II X2. Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
jumpinghubert 49 Posted September 17, 2013 I think your cpu is too old to have the parking feature. But maybe I am wrong. Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
PuFu 4600 Posted September 17, 2013 No discernible change on an AMD Phenom II X4 970 @ 3.5ghz. No change for me :/AMD 1090T 3.2ghz No change, dualcore 3.2 Ghz AMD II X2. All those CPUs have nothing to "park". Usually parked cores are threaded ones. For AMD FX users, there are 2 Windows optional updates (win7 and up) that they should install so that the OS can properly read the types of cores Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
spanishsurfer 58 Posted September 17, 2013 (edited) All those CPUs have nothing to "park". Usually parked cores are threaded ones. For AMD FX users, there are 2 Windows optional updates (win7 and up) that they should install so that the OS can properly read the types of cores What optional updates do you speak of? N/M, found it myself.... http://forums.pureoverclock.com/operating-systems/17990-windows-hot-fix-amd-fx-cpus.html Edited September 17, 2013 by SpanishSurfer Share this post Link to post Share on other sites