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Optimal bios settings? cpu external frequency settings? etc
"Dave" wrote in
: Hi I have got an Asus A7N8X deluxe, XP2600+, and Crucial PC2700 ram. I don't want to overclock the system, just run it at the speed it should be running at! Am I right in believing these should be my settings? CPU External Frequency - 166Mhz (default seems to be 100Mhz?) CPU Frequency Multiple Setting - leaving it alone as it says 'auto' CPU Frequency Multiple - leaving it alone as it seems to suggest its for overclocking System Performance - does this actually change anything or just allow me to change things? CPU Interface - Optimal Memory frequency - was going to increase this to get 166Mhz in 'resulting freq' setting? Resulting Frequency - was going to try and get this to 166Mhz Are there any other settings I should change to optimise my system? Thanks for any help given Dave When you boot your operating system, does it show your CPU speed as 2.08GHz? That is the correct clock speed for an XP 2600. You can also check your CPU in your Device manager (if you're running windows). it should read "Athalon XP 2600" (or similar). If it just says "Athalon", then your CPU hasn't been properly detected. It's really easy to sort out - in your BIOS you need to change your CPU external frequency to 200MHz and make sure the multiplier is set to 12.5, as the Asus motherboards do not correctly detect the XP 2600 settings. Leave your RAM settings as they are - it says 166MHz because it's DDR RAM - the 333MHz transfer rate applies to when your using two or more RAM sticks (put them in slots 1 & 3 or 2 &3 - NOT 1 & 2!). |
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sorry - I actually meant 166MHz with 12.5 multiplier for an XP 2600+!
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#3
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Stone Free
spam_KillKillKillstone_freeNoSpamPleaseWereBritis wrote: I have bought some Crucial PC3200 memory, but I am not sure if it is working properly, the BIOS says it is running at 200Mhz, dual channel mode. Does this mean it is working properly ? I know PC3200 memory runs at 400Mhz but I assume you are meant to double the fequency listed if it says dual channel mode. Not quite, you are meant to double the frequency listed if it's double data rate (DDR) memory. Which it is. So it's working right. You have two double-pumped, 200MHz memory busses. Each runs at an effective 400Mhz (thanks to the double pumping) and in total you have an effective 800MHz (thanks to the dual channels). This explains it a bit mo http://www.cadimensions.com/requirements3.htm Tim |
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Tim Auton wrote in
: http://www.cadimensions.com/requirements3.htm Bugger having read that it seems that the fact I went for a Barton 2500+ XP chip means that buying PC3200 memory is actually harming my memory performance until I upgrade to a 400Mhz FSB. |
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"Stone Free" spam_KillKillKillstone_freeNoSpamPleaseWereBritis wrote in message . 110.132... Tim Auton wrote in : http://www.cadimensions.com/requirements3.htm Bugger having read that it seems that the fact I went for a Barton 2500+ XP chip means that buying PC3200 memory is actually harming my memory performance until I upgrade to a 400Mhz FSB. But the Asus A7N8X dx supports 400Mhz FSB - although you may need a BIOS upgrade. A Barton 2500XP should be clocked at 1.83Ghz, so a FSB of 200 + multiplier of 9 or 10 should be OK - probably higher, if you wish. My 2100XP clocks at 2.25Ghz (180 x 12.5), and I am using PC3200 RAM. -- Doug Ramage |
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Stone Free
spam_KillKillKillstone_freeNoSpamPleaseWereBritis wrote: Tim Auton wrote in : http://www.cadimensions.com/requirements3.htm Bugger having read that it seems that the fact I went for a Barton 2500+ XP chip means that buying PC3200 memory is actually harming my memory performance until I upgrade to a 400Mhz FSB. You can always clock it back to 333 in the BIOS. But I'm not convinced by a system running slower with 333FSB and 400DDR RAM. Not really any faster I could see, but actually slower I find hard to comprehend. I think the site is wrong (sorry for the link!). I benchmarked my Athlon XP1900+ (266 FSB) system with some DDR333 RAM running at 333 CL2.5, 266 CL2.5 and 266 CL2. 333 CL2.5 won, though not by a huge ammount. Tim |
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Hmmm, I checked in my WinXP device manager and my P4c 2.4GB is listed twice.
Is it supposed to be that way? Thanks. .................................................. ........................... .................................................. ........................... .............................. You can also check your CPU in your Device manager (if you're running windows). it should read "Athalon XP 2600" (or similar). If it just says "Athalon", then your CPU hasn't been properly detected. |
#8
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Leave your RAM settings as they are - it says 166MHz because it's DDR RAM
- the 333MHz transfer rate applies to when your using two or more RAM sticks (put them in slots 1 & 3 or 2 &3 - NOT 1 & 2!). The 333 Rating has nothing to do with running them in dual channel mode. The actual figure is 166Mhz. They classify it as 333 because it works during the rise and fall of the signal. In other words each stick can do 2 jobs during each clock cycle instead of one. Eric |
#9
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With Hyperthreading enabled, yes...
"G.B. Langer" wrote in message ... Hmmm, I checked in my WinXP device manager and my P4c 2.4GB is listed twice. Is it supposed to be that way? Thanks. .................................................. ........................... .................................................. ........................... ............................. You can also check your CPU in your Device manager (if you're running windows). it should read "Athalon XP 2600" (or similar). If it just says "Athalon", then your CPU hasn't been properly detected. |
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