1.1.zip - Wintimertester

Gamers and simulation racers frequently use WinTimerTester 1.1 to cure persistent microstuttering. If your in-game frame rates seem high but your video output still suffers from subtle skips, your system may be enduring "timer drift".

Often downloaded as a file, this compact tool provides a snapshot of how Windows handles time queries and allows for performance optimizations. Here is an in-depth look at what WinTimerTester does, why it is used, and how to use it safely. What is WinTimerTester 1.1? WinTimerTester 1.1.zip

A reading that fluctuates by no more than ± 0.0005 (e.g., between 0.9995 and 1.0005) is generally considered normal and healthy. Gamers and simulation racers frequently use WinTimerTester 1

If you are seeing a ratio that isn't 1.0000, I can help you with the or CMD commands to fix it. Would you like the steps to enable or disable HPET ? Here is an in-depth look at what WinTimerTester

| Tool | Strengths | Weaknesses | |------|-----------|-------------| | | Real-time graphs, driver interrupt analysis | Bloated UI, not scriptable | | TimerBench | Command-line friendly, supports Linux/WSL | No HPET query | | WinTimerTester 1.1 | Tiny (~68KB), portable, CSV output | No GUI, no longer maintained |