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nixos-configs/machines/zix790prors/README.md
John Ogle 8924fdbc6d [zix790prors] Add README
Include detailed specifications and BIOS settings for the NixOS install. Document the dual-boot setup with Windows 11 and shared partitions.
2025-09-08 15:45:34 -07:00

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zix790prors

The re-birthed NixOS install of my 2024/2025 gaming pc / workstation.

Specs

CPU: Intel Core i7-14700K (20 cores, 28 threads, up to 5.6 GHz) Memory: 64 GB RAM Storage:

  • 4TB NVMe SSD (main drive with dual-boot partitions)
    • Windows 11 partition (NTFS)
    • NixOS /nix/store partition (btrfs)
    • Shared /games partition (btrfs, accessible from both Windows and NixOS) GPU: NVIDIA GeForce RTX 4070 Ti Boot: UEFI with 100MB EFI System Partition

This is a powerful all-purpose workstation optimized for gaming, 3D modeling, and development. It dual-boots Windows 11 with a shared btrfs /games partition accessible from both operating systems.

BIOS Settings

2025-09-08

I underclocked the CPU today. I set the cpu/cache voltage offset to -50mV and lowered the P-Core multiplier from 56x to 50x. I was able to run Intel XTU benchmarks and the CPU stayed around 80C without any throttling kicking in, whereas before it would bounce around various cores at 100C with lots of throttling taking place.

My goals for this change are:

  1. CPU longevity
  2. Fan noise
  3. Addressing various apps that say 100C is a "critical temperature" (though I believe the CPU is rated for up to 110C)

I'm leaving some performance on the table, but it almost feels like the default settings for this CPU were to effectively be overclocked.