what different SOFTWARE tools report has nothing to do with what the real voltages are at.
they ALL read their values from the same single resistor/register! and this register/resistor is never spot on, never...
and even if its reliable at lets say 1.3v real measuring 1.31v, at 1.4v real it might measure 1.35v and be way off...
so all software tools use a different formula to calculate their final values, which they get from a probe which is never spot on to begin with...
So if 2 tools show 1.3v and one shows 1.4 it doesnt mean you are most likely at 1.3v...
you might as well be at 1.5v and they all misinterpret the values.
Plus if the bios is updated the probe might report different values than before the bios update...
the decent tools like cpuz and everest read the values directly from the probe, but most tools from asus gigabyte etc only read the bios values
and those values change depending on the algorythm the bios uses to interpret the values from the probes.
if you REALLY want to know what voltages your using then theres only one way... meassure them with a DMM![]()
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