Hi Martin, I'm back to create more work for you 
You may recall my thread about the Vcore and VID readings on my ASRock Z87 Extreme 6 board, with an i5-4670K. I also understand that you are at the mercy of the sensor chip used on a board, the (lack of) information provided by the manufacture, and what information from Intel is available to you. I hope you also know I am never criticizing your work with HWiNFO, just trying to provide you with information for everyone's benefit.
The subject here is the Vcore reading. For a while now, I've seen screenshots of CPU-Z, and now HWiNFO running on Gigabyte Z87 boards, that shows Vcore readings of ~0.200 volts. That of course is in a CPU idle situation, with SpeedStep, C1E, and C-States enabled, I assume with C-States enabled down to at least C3.
Using identical CPU settings in my ASRock board's UEFI (SpeedStep, C1E, C-States enabled down to C7, using Auto CPU voltage settings, and stock CPU clocks/multipliers), the Vcore readings I get are virtually locked at ~0.900V. Core clocks are at 800MHz, VIDs of ~0.755V at idle. I know the Windows Power plan setting for Minimum processor state affect this, and I have a plan I use with that set to 0% Minimum processor state.
At the same time, I see extremely low CPU power usage, with CPU Package power (Current) commonly below 1.0 Watt, and Minimum values well below 0.1 Watt. The IA Cores Power minimum reading is incredibly low, if correct.
When I saw the ~0.200V Vcore reading in CPU-Z on Gigabyte boards, I assumed that was wrong, since that was shortly after Haswell was released. Now that time has passed, and I'm seeing those values in screenshots of HWiNFO in forums, I've changed my mind. :-/
I realize that you may not be able to get this data from the sensor chip (Nuvoton NCT6776F) and ASRock's implementation of it, etc. Attaching a debug output file that contains data at 800MHz clocks, and at 3.4GHz, switched by changing the Windows Power plan.
I'd be thrilled if you can do something about the Vcore reading for my board. Thanks very much!
Sigh, someday I'll learn how to do multiple attachments, with one in the post...
[attachment=712]

You may recall my thread about the Vcore and VID readings on my ASRock Z87 Extreme 6 board, with an i5-4670K. I also understand that you are at the mercy of the sensor chip used on a board, the (lack of) information provided by the manufacture, and what information from Intel is available to you. I hope you also know I am never criticizing your work with HWiNFO, just trying to provide you with information for everyone's benefit.
The subject here is the Vcore reading. For a while now, I've seen screenshots of CPU-Z, and now HWiNFO running on Gigabyte Z87 boards, that shows Vcore readings of ~0.200 volts. That of course is in a CPU idle situation, with SpeedStep, C1E, and C-States enabled, I assume with C-States enabled down to at least C3.
Using identical CPU settings in my ASRock board's UEFI (SpeedStep, C1E, C-States enabled down to C7, using Auto CPU voltage settings, and stock CPU clocks/multipliers), the Vcore readings I get are virtually locked at ~0.900V. Core clocks are at 800MHz, VIDs of ~0.755V at idle. I know the Windows Power plan setting for Minimum processor state affect this, and I have a plan I use with that set to 0% Minimum processor state.
At the same time, I see extremely low CPU power usage, with CPU Package power (Current) commonly below 1.0 Watt, and Minimum values well below 0.1 Watt. The IA Cores Power minimum reading is incredibly low, if correct.
When I saw the ~0.200V Vcore reading in CPU-Z on Gigabyte boards, I assumed that was wrong, since that was shortly after Haswell was released. Now that time has passed, and I'm seeing those values in screenshots of HWiNFO in forums, I've changed my mind. :-/
I realize that you may not be able to get this data from the sensor chip (Nuvoton NCT6776F) and ASRock's implementation of it, etc. Attaching a debug output file that contains data at 800MHz clocks, and at 3.4GHz, switched by changing the Windows Power plan.
I'd be thrilled if you can do something about the Vcore reading for my board. Thanks very much!
Sigh, someday I'll learn how to do multiple attachments, with one in the post...
[attachment=712]