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ABIT AI7 - PentiumŪ4 - 2.6GHz - Overclocking advice :)
Hi,
I'm just going through my last *stability* tests, and would like to begin testing the overclocking aspects of my new rig. I wanted to get the machine *Rock-Solid* using stock settings, now I got a solid base to work from on my overclocking! IntelŪ PentiumŪ 4 - 2.6GHz IntelŪ Retail HSF ABIT AI7 (BIOS #16) 512MB CORSAIR PC3200 (on Loan) ANTEC TRUE550 I also have a THERMALRIGHT SP-94 + 92mm YS-TECH on standby, but I wanna see what I can do with the retail unit first. What would you say is the standard procedure for testing your CPU and mobo's FSB?. I know I should take the memory out the equation by setting loose timings, and also running the 5:4 divider, but what about the CPU?. This is my first attempt at overclocking a IntelŪ P4, so I wanna take it all in. Do you guys say just push up the FSB like 5MHz at a time, and then try to boot up and run some Prime95, then if you fail that, nudge up the vCore a bit?. I read some reports of people running great overclocks using stock vCore (1.525v). I don't expect that myself, but I have been reading that up to 1.65v is fairly safe, as long as proper cooling is in place. So is that what I should do, relax the memory and start pushing 5MHz at a time, then if I hit problems just bump up the vCore? -- Wayne ][ IntelŪ PentiumŪ 4 - Online! :P |
#2
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"Jim" wrote I have almost the same setup, AI7 (BIOS 16), P4 2.6C (800MHz), 1GB Kingston PC3200, Coolermaster Aero 4 (copper, 2800RPM, very quiet), currently running 218MHz (1:1). Hi Jim, thanks for that detailed reply, I found it very useful! Obviously I'm not sure what to expect, but I was kinda hoping to reach 250MHz-FSB with a 5:4 memory ratio, but I guess that depends on whether the CPU or Mobo can handle those figures. Reading your story it sounds like your CPU may be in question. If only you had a different P4 to test, or some different RAM. I finally got my rig *Bullet-Proof* (12Hours Prime95 + 3DMark01) using stock settings. Had a nightmare trying to run some brand-new OCZ Platinum PC3200 Limited-Edition at any decent timings, took me 8 days of ranting/testing to finally see it wasn't gonna happen, and sent the memory back for testing and *loaned* a stick of nice Corsair. Anyway I figure that I will set the memory to 5:4, then bump up the FSB by 10MHz a time to 230MHz, then slowly begin pushing from there. I too had doubts about the AI7, but actually I am beginning to like it now. .. .my first Pentium board since my trusty BE6-II v1.1. I been chatting to a guy called *Navig* over in the ABIT forums, and he running his AI7 at 300MHz-FSB with a P4c 2.4GHz. Also I'm aware of something that happens on different ABIT systems that I have built. Basically if you are trying to work your way upwards in an overclock (CPU/FSB whatever) you will get to a stage which you cannot pass, and will need to *leap-frog*. The last time I had this was with working on a recent AMD build using an AN7. I was trying to test out a T-Bred XP2400+ CPU on a 200MHz-FSB BUS (10x200), this CPU normally uses a 133MHz BUS (15x133). Anyway no matter what I tried it just wouldn't boot at 10x200= 2GHz which was the CPU's default GHz, so after some head-scratching I thought Sod-it, lets try higher and changed the settings to 11x200 (2.2GHz) and wouldn't you know it the PC booted and was stable. This scenario will catch out people like me who like to work their way *linearly* upwards, but sometimes you just need to skip this patch and resume on the other side. In the case of the AMD system, I was able to get that chip up to 2.4GHz stable using nearly 1.9vCore, but temps were a bit too much for the retail HSF :P Anyway I hope what I said made some sense, and I will let you know how I get on. . . -- Wayne ][ IntelŪ PentiumŪ 4 - Online! :P |
#3
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"TomG" wrote I usually start by bouncing the FSB up a fair chunk without getting greedy just to get the first "chunk" out of the way. from there, I increment by 2 Mhz until I find instability and back off a bit. at this stage, you have to decide what your approach is going to be... upping the voltage to the CPU and continuing forward or what... Hi Tom, thanks for reply, I promise not to bite your head off today :P One thing I was wondering, how can you separate your CPU and FSB when you start to hit errors? I can adjust vCore if I think my CPU is getting a bit ragged, but what can I do if I suspect my boards FSB is getting wobbly? is there anyway to adjust northbridge voltages? or any other tools to help stabilize a overclocked system bus? thanks as always -- Wayne ][ IntelŪ PentiumŪ 4 - Online! :P |
#4
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I have almost the same setup, AI7 (BIOS 16), P4 2.6C (800MHz), 1GB Kingston
PC3200, Coolermaster Aero 4 (copper, 2800RPM, very quiet), currently running 218MHz (1:1). Be forewarned, the AI7 is a fine mobo, but the OC'ing ability of this particular mobo has proven to be inconsistent, more than I can recall w/ any other Abit mobo. It seems either you get a GREAT mobo (insane OCs to 250, 260, or more), or mediocre results (230, if you're lucky). Unfortunately, I'm with many others in the latter category, the system simply will not run stable above 218MHz sync. I can just barely run 230MHz FSB w/ 5:4 without XP hanging on boot-up, so it's not the memory. And believe me, I'm VERY experienced and worked on this mobo for TWO MONTHS, to the point of exhaustion, it just won't do it. So just beware, keep your fingers crosses. As I said, I can't run the CPU FSB above 230Mhz, and can't run the memory past 218MHz. So that leaves me little choice, either run CPU FSB 230MHz (5:4), and thus seriously underclock the memory, or run 218MHz (1:1) and sacrifice some CPU OC'ing to keep the memory tapped out, and sync'd. Not a great situation, my only option being to get some PC4000 perhaps. But at today's prices, and given I don't think I'll being seeing anything more than CPU FSB 230MHz anyway, I decided to stay put. I was *hoping* to run CPU FSB 250 (5:4), apparently this is a pipe-dream. Even tried water cooling, no dice. Yet others run the mobo 250 and up, I'm stumped. Since the P4 CPU is far more likely to be overclockable, I like to isolate the memory by overclocking the CPU FSB and memory in sync (1:1). IOW, try running 210, 220, 230, etc. In most cases, you'll tap out memory before the CPU (for me, that was 220MHz). I determined this using Memtest-86, NOT Windows. Windows is too demanding, takes to long to reboot, etc. And just because Memtest-86 runs clean, doesn't mean Windows will. Many attempts to OC in Memtest-86 ran fine, then hung Windows within seconds. I usually keep the memory at SPD until I tap it out, then start losening the timings, to see how much more I can gain. At that point, that's my upper memory limit. I then return to the SPD settings, then start tightening the timings, again, until it becomes unstable under Memtest-86, that's my lower limit. When completed, I have a low/high range for the memory. Of course, during this process, I'm adjusting vDimm to see if it helps, within reason, as necessary. Now I turn to the CPU. In this case, I suggest runnung 5:4 so that memory now doesn't hinder the results (i.e., it's always underclocked, at least until CPU FSB 250MHz). As with memory, I'm increasing voltage within reason, as necessary when instability occurs. Again, all this is under Memtest-86. When completed, I have a pretty good idea what the the CPU and memory can do, individually. I now try running Windows, which invariably can't handle the maximum OC under Memtest. I start working backwards, reducing CPU and memory OC's until Windows stability returns. Once Windows loads and run (or appears to run) stable, I run Prime95. Ultimately, I never accept OC'ing results until Prime95 runs 24 hours, no errors. I strongly suggest keeping a diary, it really helps. You're adjusting a lot of variables, and it can get awfully difficult to keep track. The last thing you want to do is spend two hours mucking w/ the system, then lose track of where you are. List all the variable (FSB, memory, voltages, etc.), I even track memtest wall time to see if perhaps the OC is higher, but results are deminishing (sometimes happens on asynch CPU/DRAM ratio!). HTH Jim "Wayne Youngman" wrote in message ... Hi, I'm just going through my last *stability* tests, and would like to begin testing the overclocking aspects of my new rig. I wanted to get the machine *Rock-Solid* using stock settings, now I got a solid base to work from on my overclocking! IntelŪ PentiumŪ 4 - 2.6GHz IntelŪ Retail HSF ABIT AI7 (BIOS #16) 512MB CORSAIR PC3200 (on Loan) ANTEC TRUE550 I also have a THERMALRIGHT SP-94 + 92mm YS-TECH on standby, but I wanna see what I can do with the retail unit first. What would you say is the standard procedure for testing your CPU and mobo's FSB?. I know I should take the memory out the equation by setting loose timings, and also running the 5:4 divider, but what about the CPU?. This is my first attempt at overclocking a IntelŪ P4, so I wanna take it all in. Do you guys say just push up the FSB like 5MHz at a time, and then try to boot up and run some Prime95, then if you fail that, nudge up the vCore a bit?. I read some reports of people running great overclocks using stock vCore (1.525v). I don't expect that myself, but I have been reading that up to 1.65v is fairly safe, as long as proper cooling is in place. So is that what I should do, relax the memory and start pushing 5MHz at a time, then if I hit problems just bump up the vCore? -- Wayne ][ IntelŪ PentiumŪ 4 - Online! :P |
#5
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"Keith" wrote PC? How about ideas on loading XP. I heard there is a definite right & wrong order of things to do....mostly w/ drivers. Hi, well I have my own way of building, which is to start fairly bare-bones (no HDD or Optical) just the floppy. I roughly arrange the cables and stuff, but I keep it a little rough to start, as normally I rebuild the system completely after I know it is rock stable and overclocking well. I don't take off the northbridge fan or anything like that, until I am certain that everything is working at stock. So on my current build, the cables are pretty neat, and allot of then are sheathed, will make it perfect soon. This time I did start with the retail INTEL HSF, so I can test it out and learn how it performs, but I have just bought a nice looking Thermalright SP-94 + YS-Tech 92mm fan to take the place of the stock unit. As far as Windows installation and drivers, well I let XP partition and format my RAID-0 boot drive for me, all done from the WindowsXP CD-ROM. Once Windows was installed I: 1) Installed chipset drivers from my CD 2) Installed my graphics-card drivers (CAT 3.7) 3) Install DX 9.0b simple really, I also have the INTEL IAA RAID edition installed, dunno what it does? :P -- Wayne ][ IntelŪ PentiumŪ 4 - Online! :P |
#6
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Hi,
I am running 13x 231 (3GHz) with 1.6vCore with 57°C Max-Load running Prime95 stable now for a few hours. I can boot WindowsXP Pro at 240/250MHz-FSB but Prime95 will fail in the first minute? The AI7 is indeed *undervolting* the vCore, so even though I have 1.6v set in BIOS, it is reading 1.57-1.59vCore in uGuru. Not sure if my CPU has maxed out *or* the mobo is having trouble with the 240-250MHz-FSB? but Windows loads fine, just Prime95 will error out very quickly. The PC3200 Memory is running 5:4 with very slow SPD timings and GAT is A-A-A-D-D, so I don't think that is causing any issues *unless* the board doesn't like SLOW timings? Hehe so much for reaching 3.25GHz-CPU & 1GHz-FSB :P Hmm what else, the AGP is still default 1.55v, the PSB strap is 800. I feel like I want to give the northbridge/chipset some more juice but I don't think I can? How high can I go with the vCore? is 1.75v getting risky (as long as the cooling is ok?). Or maybe I just hit the ceiling of my humble SL6WS Costa P4c 2.6GHz (@3GHz)? My CPU: http://www.waynes.spamtrap.btinterne.../my_p4_box.jpg -- Wayne ][ IntelŪ PentiumŪ 4 - Online! :P |
#7
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"TomG" wrote 1.75 seems mighty aggressive to me for CPU core... tighten the ram timings way up as a test to se if the system starts to fall over based on the ram tweak... if not, that may tell you that you have some overhead in the ram still available. Hi Tom, I'm not quite sure what tightening up the ram timings will do to help me achieve a higher overclock, but as it running at 5:4 its only running 185MHz (370DDR). I just read something on HARD-OCP that says they couldn't get there test board above 235MHz FSB until they took off the North-bridge HSF and re-applied the thermal compound. Hmm I wonder if my northbridge HSF has the same badly applied thermal-compound?. The northbridge HSF doesn't feel very warm to the touch, I would expect it to be a little hot while running a 231Mhz FSB? Anyway Prime95 is churning away, no errors yet after three hours so I will leave it to run-in overnight and see how I get on tomorrow. -- Wayne ][ IntelŪ PentiumŪ 4 - Online! :P I will have to get this SP-94 into the action soon, maybe my current 57°C Load temps aren't helping? mayb |
#8
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I usually start by bouncing the FSB up a fair chunk without getting greedy
just to get the first "chunk" out of the way. from there, I increment by 2 Mhz until I find instability and back off a bit. at this stage, you have to decide what your approach is going to be... upping the voltage to the CPU and continuing forward or what... -- Thomas Geery Network+ certified ftp://geerynet.d2g.com ftp://68.98.180.8 Abit Mirror ----- Cable modem IP This IP is dynamic so it *could* change!... over 130,000 FTP users served! ^^^^^^^ "Wayne Youngman" wrote in message ... Hi, I'm just going through my last *stability* tests, and would like to begin testing the overclocking aspects of my new rig. I wanted to get the machine *Rock-Solid* using stock settings, now I got a solid base to work from on my overclocking! IntelŪ PentiumŪ 4 - 2.6GHz IntelŪ Retail HSF ABIT AI7 (BIOS #16) 512MB CORSAIR PC3200 (on Loan) ANTEC TRUE550 I also have a THERMALRIGHT SP-94 + 92mm YS-TECH on standby, but I wanna see what I can do with the retail unit first. What would you say is the standard procedure for testing your CPU and mobo's FSB?. I know I should take the memory out the equation by setting loose timings, and also running the 5:4 divider, but what about the CPU?. This is my first attempt at overclocking a IntelŪ P4, so I wanna take it all in. Do you guys say just push up the FSB like 5MHz at a time, and then try to boot up and run some Prime95, then if you fail that, nudge up the vCore a bit?. I read some reports of people running great overclocks using stock vCore (1.525v). I don't expect that myself, but I have been reading that up to 1.65v is fairly safe, as long as proper cooling is in place. So is that what I should do, relax the memory and start pushing 5MHz at a time, then if I hit problems just bump up the vCore? -- Wayne ][ IntelŪ PentiumŪ 4 - Online! :P |
#9
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not sure I agree that your ram is not the limiting factor, even at 5:4
-- Thomas Geery Network+ certified ftp://geerynet.d2g.com ftp://68.98.180.8 Abit Mirror ----- Cable modem IP This IP is dynamic so it *could* change!... over 130,000 FTP users served! ^^^^^^^ "Jim" wrote in message news:ZHJec.1290$Yf6.377@fed1read07... I have almost the same setup, AI7 (BIOS 16), P4 2.6C (800MHz), 1GB Kingston PC3200, Coolermaster Aero 4 (copper, 2800RPM, very quiet), currently running 218MHz (1:1). Be forewarned, the AI7 is a fine mobo, but the OC'ing ability of this particular mobo has proven to be inconsistent, more than I can recall w/ any other Abit mobo. It seems either you get a GREAT mobo (insane OCs to 250, 260, or more), or mediocre results (230, if you're lucky). Unfortunately, I'm with many others in the latter category, the system simply will not run stable above 218MHz sync. I can just barely run 230MHz FSB w/ 5:4 without XP hanging on boot-up, so it's not the memory. And believe me, I'm VERY experienced and worked on this mobo for TWO MONTHS, to the point of exhaustion, it just won't do it. So just beware, keep your fingers crosses. As I said, I can't run the CPU FSB above 230Mhz, and can't run the memory past 218MHz. So that leaves me little choice, either run CPU FSB 230MHz (5:4), and thus seriously underclock the memory, or run 218MHz (1:1) and sacrifice some CPU OC'ing to keep the memory tapped out, and sync'd. Not a great situation, my only option being to get some PC4000 perhaps. But at today's prices, and given I don't think I'll being seeing anything more than CPU FSB 230MHz anyway, I decided to stay put. I was *hoping* to run CPU FSB 250 (5:4), apparently this is a pipe-dream. Even tried water cooling, no dice. Yet others run the mobo 250 and up, I'm stumped. Since the P4 CPU is far more likely to be overclockable, I like to isolate the memory by overclocking the CPU FSB and memory in sync (1:1). IOW, try running 210, 220, 230, etc. In most cases, you'll tap out memory before the CPU (for me, that was 220MHz). I determined this using Memtest-86, NOT Windows. Windows is too demanding, takes to long to reboot, etc. And just because Memtest-86 runs clean, doesn't mean Windows will. Many attempts to OC in Memtest-86 ran fine, then hung Windows within seconds. I usually keep the memory at SPD until I tap it out, then start losening the timings, to see how much more I can gain. At that point, that's my upper memory limit. I then return to the SPD settings, then start tightening the timings, again, until it becomes unstable under Memtest-86, that's my lower limit. When completed, I have a low/high range for the memory. Of course, during this process, I'm adjusting vDimm to see if it helps, within reason, as necessary. Now I turn to the CPU. In this case, I suggest runnung 5:4 so that memory now doesn't hinder the results (i.e., it's always underclocked, at least until CPU FSB 250MHz). As with memory, I'm increasing voltage within reason, as necessary when instability occurs. Again, all this is under Memtest-86. When completed, I have a pretty good idea what the the CPU and memory can do, individually. I now try running Windows, which invariably can't handle the maximum OC under Memtest. I start working backwards, reducing CPU and memory OC's until Windows stability returns. Once Windows loads and run (or appears to run) stable, I run Prime95. Ultimately, I never accept OC'ing results until Prime95 runs 24 hours, no errors. I strongly suggest keeping a diary, it really helps. You're adjusting a lot of variables, and it can get awfully difficult to keep track. The last thing you want to do is spend two hours mucking w/ the system, then lose track of where you are. List all the variable (FSB, memory, voltages, etc.), I even track memtest wall time to see if perhaps the OC is higher, but results are deminishing (sometimes happens on asynch CPU/DRAM ratio!). HTH Jim "Wayne Youngman" wrote in message ... Hi, I'm just going through my last *stability* tests, and would like to begin testing the overclocking aspects of my new rig. I wanted to get the machine *Rock-Solid* using stock settings, now I got a solid base to work from on my overclocking! IntelŪ PentiumŪ 4 - 2.6GHz IntelŪ Retail HSF ABIT AI7 (BIOS #16) 512MB CORSAIR PC3200 (on Loan) ANTEC TRUE550 I also have a THERMALRIGHT SP-94 + 92mm YS-TECH on standby, but I wanna see what I can do with the retail unit first. What would you say is the standard procedure for testing your CPU and mobo's FSB?. I know I should take the memory out the equation by setting loose timings, and also running the 5:4 divider, but what about the CPU?. This is my first attempt at overclocking a IntelŪ P4, so I wanna take it all in. Do you guys say just push up the FSB like 5MHz at a time, and then try to boot up and run some Prime95, then if you fail that, nudge up the vCore a bit?. I read some reports of people running great overclocks using stock vCore (1.525v). I don't expect that myself, but I have been reading that up to 1.65v is fairly safe, as long as proper cooling is in place. So is that what I should do, relax the memory and start pushing 5MHz at a time, then if I hit problems just bump up the vCore? -- Wayne ][ IntelŪ PentiumŪ 4 - Online! :P |
#10
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Well, if I can't run, say, FSB 235 (5:4), thereby underclocking PC3200 to
188MHz (vs. 200MHz spec), yet, I can run FSB 218MHz (1:1), no problem, I think it's safe to say memory is at least an issue. Even totally relaxed memory timings maxs no difference. Now, is it possible that running asynch (vs. sync) is itself causing a problem?! Maybe. IOW, if perhaps I had PC4000, maybe I *could* run FSB 250 (1:1). I've certainly considered it. Problem is, at these prices, who wants to run out an get PC4000 only to end up tapping out a 230 (1:1)! That's my dilemma. Perhaps if I found a deal on PC4000, I'd give it a whirl, but right now, it's not even a remote possibility. I originally got the PC3200 for a mere $176! Even that's now $286, on sale! no less. Trust me, I didn't go into the half of it regarding everything I tried. I reseated the Northbridge, disabled overdrive features, reduced memory timings, water cooling, changing DIMM slots, running HSF full bore, running default BIOS settings, vDIMM up to 2.8v, vCore up to 1.8v!, to name a few, even took to literally blowing an 80mm fan directly on the Northbridge, it just doesn't matter. Unless my CPU is simply a dud, something on this mobo is holding me back, I'd sure like to know what. Jim "TomG" wrote in message news:4SPec.6853$55.3940@lakeread02... not sure I agree that your ram is not the limiting factor, even at 5:4 -- Thomas Geery Network+ certified ftp://geerynet.d2g.com ftp://68.98.180.8 Abit Mirror ----- Cable modem IP This IP is dynamic so it *could* change!... over 130,000 FTP users served! ^^^^^^^ "Jim" wrote in message news:ZHJec.1290$Yf6.377@fed1read07... I have almost the same setup, AI7 (BIOS 16), P4 2.6C (800MHz), 1GB Kingston PC3200, Coolermaster Aero 4 (copper, 2800RPM, very quiet), currently running 218MHz (1:1). Be forewarned, the AI7 is a fine mobo, but the OC'ing ability of this particular mobo has proven to be inconsistent, more than I can recall w/ any other Abit mobo. It seems either you get a GREAT mobo (insane OCs to 250, 260, or more), or mediocre results (230, if you're lucky). Unfortunately, I'm with many others in the latter category, the system simply will not run stable above 218MHz sync. I can just barely run 230MHz FSB w/ 5:4 without XP hanging on boot-up, so it's not the memory. And believe me, I'm VERY experienced and worked on this mobo for TWO MONTHS, to the point of exhaustion, it just won't do it. So just beware, keep your fingers crosses. As I said, I can't run the CPU FSB above 230Mhz, and can't run the memory past 218MHz. So that leaves me little choice, either run CPU FSB 230MHz (5:4), and thus seriously underclock the memory, or run 218MHz (1:1) and sacrifice some CPU OC'ing to keep the memory tapped out, and sync'd. Not a great situation, my only option being to get some PC4000 perhaps. But at today's prices, and given I don't think I'll being seeing anything more than CPU FSB 230MHz anyway, I decided to stay put. I was *hoping* to run CPU FSB 250 (5:4), apparently this is a pipe-dream. Even tried water cooling, no dice. Yet others run the mobo 250 and up, I'm stumped. Since the P4 CPU is far more likely to be overclockable, I like to isolate the memory by overclocking the CPU FSB and memory in sync (1:1). IOW, try running 210, 220, 230, etc. In most cases, you'll tap out memory before the CPU (for me, that was 220MHz). I determined this using Memtest-86, NOT Windows. Windows is too demanding, takes to long to reboot, etc. And just because Memtest-86 runs clean, doesn't mean Windows will. Many attempts to OC in Memtest-86 ran fine, then hung Windows within seconds. I usually keep the memory at SPD until I tap it out, then start losening the timings, to see how much more I can gain. At that point, that's my upper memory limit. I then return to the SPD settings, then start tightening the timings, again, until it becomes unstable under Memtest-86, that's my lower limit. When completed, I have a low/high range for the memory. Of course, during this process, I'm adjusting vDimm to see if it helps, within reason, as necessary. Now I turn to the CPU. In this case, I suggest runnung 5:4 so that memory now doesn't hinder the results (i.e., it's always underclocked, at least until CPU FSB 250MHz). As with memory, I'm increasing voltage within reason, as necessary when instability occurs. Again, all this is under Memtest-86. When completed, I have a pretty good idea what the the CPU and memory can do, individually. I now try running Windows, which invariably can't handle the maximum OC under Memtest. I start working backwards, reducing CPU and memory OC's until Windows stability returns. Once Windows loads and run (or appears to run) stable, I run Prime95. Ultimately, I never accept OC'ing results until Prime95 runs 24 hours, no errors. I strongly suggest keeping a diary, it really helps. You're adjusting a lot of variables, and it can get awfully difficult to keep track. The last thing you want to do is spend two hours mucking w/ the system, then lose track of where you are. List all the variable (FSB, memory, voltages, etc.), I even track memtest wall time to see if perhaps the OC is higher, but results are deminishing (sometimes happens on asynch CPU/DRAM ratio!). HTH Jim "Wayne Youngman" wrote in message ... Hi, I'm just going through my last *stability* tests, and would like to begin testing the overclocking aspects of my new rig. I wanted to get the machine *Rock-Solid* using stock settings, now I got a solid base to work from on my overclocking! IntelŪ PentiumŪ 4 - 2.6GHz IntelŪ Retail HSF ABIT AI7 (BIOS #16) 512MB CORSAIR PC3200 (on Loan) ANTEC TRUE550 I also have a THERMALRIGHT SP-94 + 92mm YS-TECH on standby, but I wanna see what I can do with the retail unit first. What would you say is the standard procedure for testing your CPU and mobo's FSB?. I know I should take the memory out the equation by setting loose timings, and also running the 5:4 divider, but what about the CPU?. This is my first attempt at overclocking a IntelŪ P4, so I wanna take it all in. Do you guys say just push up the FSB like 5MHz at a time, and then try to boot up and run some Prime95, then if you fail that, nudge up the vCore a bit?. I read some reports of people running great overclocks using stock vCore (1.525v). I don't expect that myself, but I have been reading that up to 1.65v is fairly safe, as long as proper cooling is in place. So is that what I should do, relax the memory and start pushing 5MHz at a time, then if I hit problems just bump up the vCore? -- Wayne ][ IntelŪ PentiumŪ 4 - Online! :P |
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