thx for the pictures its more testing the OS for interruption then check the latency of the cpu it should be the lowest measure...
Waring, DPC latency Checker is not compatible with Windows 8 or 10! From their site: Windows 8 Compatibility: The DPC latency utility runs on Windows 8 but does not show correct values. The output suggests that the Windows 8 kernel performs badly and introduces a constant latency of one millisecond, which is not the case in practice. DPCs in the Windows 8 kernel behave identical to Windows 7. The utility produces incorrect results because the implementation of kernel timers has changed in Windows 8, which causes a side effect with the measuring algorithm used by the utility. Thesycon is working on a new version of the DPC latency utility and will make it available on this site as soon as it is finished. DPC Latency Checker for Windows 7, Windows 7 x64, Windows Vista, Windows Vista x64, Windows Server 2003, Windows Server 2003 x64, Windows XP, Windows XP x64, Windows 2000
How about Intel's new speed shift technology, some works only with Skylake CPU and Windows 10 ... http: // microsoft-news.com/intel-teams-up-with-microsoft-to-bring-speed-shift-technology-to-windows-10/
So whatever you did to achieve those latencies... is it practical in normal usage? Just wondering if you disabled all the network devices and usb devices?
you have to run latencymon longer then 2 minutes. run it for a good half hour or more. and it will show your systems true latency.
Could it also be HW-Monitoring software? (HWinfo32) There coul dbe many reasons (different possible software running in th ebackground). Is there another way to find it out?