

(with my current system it seems to have beneficial effects on how system uses multithreading).ġ. If enabled ONLY platform timers will be used.ī) If enabled, it may resolve issues with stability.Ī) An experimental feature which allows system to tweak usage of clocks embedded in CPUs. However this policy changed a bit in Windows 8 and 8.1 where clock skew became a source of cheating in competetive overclocking.ī) Windows will not use HPET unless specifically told so (usedplatformclock True).Ĭ) Apps may or may not use HPET if its present in Device Manager.Ī) Its a power saving feature and you may use it on desktops (disabledynamictick true).Ī) More restrictive than Useplaformclock. The option is available starting in Windows 8 and Windows Server 2012.Įnables and disables dynamic timer tick feature.Ī) HPET is a backup clock which should prevent skewing of timers since Windows 7/2008 R2 on Multiprocessor systems. This option should only be used for debugging.įorces the use of the platform clock as the system's performance counter.įorces the clock to be backed by a platform source, no synthetic timers are allowed. Tscsyncpolicy Ĭontrols the times stamp counter synchronization policy. You have to check which one works for your application the best. If you are on a notebook and you have to rely on the battery you may consider to keep it as it is.Ī) Usedplatformclock = Enabled/True while "High Precision Event Timer" in Device manager is enabled.ī) Usedplatformclock = Disabled/False while "High Precision Event Timerr" in Device manager is disabled.

If you are on a desktop PC - Disabledynamictick = Enabled/True This feature is designed to lower power utilization. Activity of OS core will be postponed until "there is enough things to do". Amounts of DPC calls per minute will decrease. If Disabled, those will perform only when necessary. All actions will be performed without any delay Amounts of DPC calls per minute will increase Its best to combine it with disabled core parking or features which allow CPU cores to go to low-power state. This feature when Enabled causes OS to execute tasks asociated with system core periodically. It's time to find the final tweak once and for all: Which timer setting is the best?Īlso disabling before you install seems to give reduced DPC latency. 99% of my input lag problems since then have been from these timer issues.

This really is the final frontier of my final boss for input lag. These timer tweaks are so extremely complicated, it really hurts my brain to wrap around doing mental gymnastics and testing in general is so bothersome. Now all that's left is, which is, which is the best combinations? This is what you call a true enthusiast and live up to the site's motto: The pursuit of performance. They really truly put in the work to find all this stuff out.

I really love people x7007 and Offler man.
