1.1.zip | Wintimertester
WinTimerTester measures the , which reflects how often the system's performance counter increments per second. It is commonly used to:
Extract the executable file ( WinTimerTester.exe ).
—the system can become unstable. WinTimerTester provides immediate visual feedback on whether these tweaks have helped or harmed the system's timing consistency. Portability and Use Distributed typically as a small ZIP file ( WinTimerTester 1.1.zip WinTimerTester 1.1.zip
By following this guide, users can gain a deeper understanding of WinTimerTester 1.1.zip and its applications, ensuring that their systems and applications are optimized for performance and reliability.
: It does not require installation and makes no permanent registry changes. Interpreting Your Results When you run the tool, pay attention to the QueryPerformanceFrequency value, which indicates your active timer setup: Frequency Value Active Timer Configuration Performance Tier ~14.318 MHz (Forced high precision) High Performance ~3.8 - 3.9 MHz TSC + HPET (Windows default hybrid) Medium Performance ~2.7 - 3.5 MHz TSC + LAPICs (Older/fallback timers) Low Performance How to Test and Optimize WinTimerTester measures the , which reflects how often
Shows much higher frequencies (e.g., ~3.0 GHz depending on CPU) but can sometimes drift or desync on older hardware.
, it means different applications are requesting different timer precision levels. Conclusion Interpreting Your Results When you run the tool,
Typically reports a frequency of ~14.318 MHz . It is highly precise but can sometimes introduce latency on older platforms.
Allow the tool to run for a few minutes. You are specifically looking for the "Ratio" to stabilize. For a healthy, synchronized system, this ratio should eventually approach 1.0000 .
If you are seeing a other than 1.0000 (e.g., 0.9998 or 1.0002), I can help you with the specific Windows CMD commands ( bcdedit ) to try and resync your timers. Would you like those steps?