Posts Tagged ‘Overclocking’
Phenom II X4 925 Overclocking Help
Posted by Parkzone Corsair in Memory on July 27th, 2010
Recently after upgrading my system I finding out some issue in dealing with the system overclocking. I have a Asus M4A79XTD Evo motherboard, Phenom II X4 925 processor, Cooler Master V8 and corsair ram. I had gone through various guides and article which were based on Intel system. I had first tested my system specs on CPUz which shows everything fine. But the frequency of the same does not increase.
Phenom II X4 925 Overclocking Help
I too have a similar configuration board in my system. I had tried to overclock my system to a higher frequency. I had tried to reach at 3.g Ghz where the same looks stable and the temperature stays at 40. But when I increase the same to 3.6 the system crashed down. I had pushed up the frequency of FSB a little bit to 3 Mhz but there is not response on the same. I am not able to get the exact cause behind the crash.
In my case I had tried to go further 1.42 and everything there works well. But on the same hand I reduced a bit nb frequency and speed of the memory. Now after that it worked well for couple of hours. So that simply states that here there not a big role of power supply. There might be some other issue which is causing the system to crash. Run a stability test in OCCT.
Phenom II X4 925 Overclocking Help
Do this, increase the up voltage to 1.4v and the overclock the same. Then after that up the FSB to 250Hz which might provide you some 3.5 Ghz of clock speed. After that switching to RAM multiplier set the same to 1333 Mhz. It will work properly without any crash. You can must use Prime95 for the same. I use this and my system runs stable for hours.
Phenom II X4 925 Overclocking Help
I have the same processor but the motherboard is different. Talking about the RAM it is same. In my case I have received 3.5 Ghz at the voltages which were set before. I had moved them little up for running same for a long time. The temperature here get fluctuated which rises when I perform some more settings. That is the only fear I have that my processor won’t burn out if I push the same to much higher frequency.
The CPU comes in some high-end models. The biggest AM3 announced quad core is the 910, which runs at only 2.6 GHz. And yet it is not available for sale to individuals, but reserved for OEMs. This on is identical to 910 (4 cores, 4 x 512 KB L2 cache, 6 MB L3 cache) but operate at 200 MHz over 2.8 GHz. The good news is that the TDP would be unchanged, at 95 W.
The AMD Phenom X4 processors are the most advanced market for a true multitasking thanks to its unique design and true quad-core. Avoid breakdowns now because of quad-core whitebait and their bus system architecture obsolete.Real performance quad-heart for a gaming experience breathtaking realism, digital media an incredible sharpness and extreme multitasking capabilities.
Overclocking software athlon 64 +
Posted by Parkzone Corsair in Memory on July 26th, 2010
In reality, only the increase in voltage (vCore) to an inappropriate value may shorten its life if the cooling system is inadequate. In some cases, a too high value of vCore can damage the cache, as was the case with Pentium 4. If you plan to overclock a prolonged and stable, therefore make sure not to exceed certain values of voltages, the ideal is to remain within the values recommended by the manufacturer. However, AMD recommends a maximum voltage of 1.5 volts for the Athlon 64 are etched in 130 nm or 90 nm. In short, the flexibility is low and to reach an overclocking worthy of the name, it will normally rise higher at least to get a good processor.<p><strong> my <a rel=”nofollow” onclick=”javascript:pageTracker._trackPageview(’/outgoing/article_exit_link’);” href=”http://install-how.blogspot.com/2010/06/amd-athlon-x3-ii-435-overclocking.html” title=”Article Manager’s Articles”>Overclocking & Computer Modification</a></strong><p>
am looking for overclocking software for athlon 64 + . Actually it is my friends commuter i think his configuration is
M: Asus M2N <p><strong> my <a rel=”nofollow” onclick=”javascript:pageTracker._trackPageview(’/outgoing/article_exit_link’);” href=”http://install-how.blogspot.com/2010/06/amd-athlon-x3-ii-435-overclocking.html” title=”Article Manager’s Articles”>Overclocking & Computer Modification</a></strong><p>
Procces: Athlon 64 X2 @ 3 Ghz
Ram: 2×2048 Corsair PC5300 Kit
CG: Nvidia Geforce 8600 GT
3 x 300 GB Sata
so please help me to overclock this pc
thank you
Before you start to get the maximum overclock of its platform, it must first address the problem of the HyperTransport bus, which differs most from an Athlon XP with overclocking for example. As already said, our 3800 + bus arrived with a 1 GHz HT, or 5 times the frequency of the FSB of origin. To avoid being limited by this one, we’ll try not to exceed a frequency of 1 GHz. And to do this, our 9NDA3 + proposes to modify the multiplier bus HT. So:
- With a coefficient of 5x origin, must not exceed 200 MHz, the FSB of origin
- With a factor of 4x, it should not exceed 250 MHz FSB (250×4 = 1000)
- With a factor of 3x, we must not exceed 333 MHz FSB (333×3 = 999)
- We will stop there
<p><strong> my <a rel=”nofollow” onclick=”javascript:pageTracker._trackPageview(’/outgoing/article_exit_link’);” href=”http://install-how.blogspot.com/2010/06/amd-athlon-x3-ii-435-overclocking.html” title=”Article Manager’s Articles”>Overclocking & Computer Modification</a></strong><p>
We therefore begin by choosing a multiplier to 3x HyperTransport bus, so as to reach a maximum of 333 MHz FSB without being bothered by it:
To find the maximum FSB we will also lower the CPU multiplier (thank you Cool-n-Quiet) at its minimum value, is 8x our 9NDA3 +:
The last point to be tested, the frequency of memory which will also depend on the FSB. In our case, we set it to operate with FSB DDR200 at its original frequency (FSB divided by 2), which reach a maximum memory frequency of 166.7 MHz in the best case, that is to say if we get a FSB of 333 MHz:
<p><strong> my <a rel=”nofollow” onclick=”javascript:pageTracker._trackPageview(’/outgoing/article_exit_link’);” href=”http://install-how.blogspot.com/2010/06/amd-athlon-x3-ii-435-overclocking.html” title=”Article Manager’s Articles”>Overclocking & Computer Modification</a></strong><p>
Does Overclocking affects DVD burning speed
Posted by Parkzone Corsair in Memory on July 17th, 2010
had overclocked my processor and memory to get more performance in my gaming thing. But after that my DVD burning speed is reduce. Does overclocking affects the DVD burning speed. How can I increase the speed of DVD burner. And what are the pro and cons of overclocking a system. Can use it for a long purpose. Any suggestion really appreciated.
<p><strong> my <a rel=”nofollow” onclick=”javascript:pageTracker._trackPageview(’/outgoing/article_exit_link’);” href=”http://install-how.blogspot.com/2010/06/amd-athlon-x3-ii-435-overclocking.html” title=”Article Manager’s Articles”>Overclocking & Computer Modification</a></strong><p>
Normally it is possible. Because overclocking put your system resource at the edge of degradation. Extreme Overclocking can burn your processor and other hardware. There are special Intel processor which supports this feature. So if you really enjoy overclocking then put some money and buy them. Do not play with your existing system. Add more memory sticks to increase the performance of your system.<p><strong> my <a rel=”nofollow” onclick=”javascript:pageTracker._trackPageview(’/outgoing/article_exit_link’);” href=”http://install-how.blogspot.com/2010/06/amd-athlon-x3-ii-435-overclocking.html” title=”Article Manager’s Articles”>Overclocking & Computer Modification</a></strong><p>
This can be a firmware issue. Do the site of your DVD device and update the firmware. The firmware is like a drive to the device. A latest upgrade can fix up the issue. The speed of DVD RW is something like this. 1x means that it burns 1.385 Megabyte of data per seconds. That we can takes as 11 Megabyte of data per second. So if you have an 8x Rw then you can burn around 88 Megabyte of data per second.<p><strong> my <a rel=”nofollow” onclick=”javascript:pageTracker._trackPageview(’/outgoing/article_exit_link’);” href=”http://install-how.blogspot.com/2010/06/amd-athlon-x3-ii-435-overclocking.html” title=”Article Manager’s Articles”>Overclocking & Computer Modification</a></strong><p>
Overclocking can fried up your processor. Overclocking means increasing the speed of a computer which heat up the processor. Second thing I don’t think that overclocking is affecting your DVD burning speed. It is possible that overclocking is utilizing a large amount of your system resource and making your system slow. Just add up more ram to increase you system performance.
<p><strong> my <a rel=”nofollow” onclick=”javascript:pageTracker._trackPageview(’/outgoing/article_exit_link’);” href=”http://install-how.blogspot.com/2010/06/amd-athlon-x3-ii-435-overclocking.html” title=”Article Manager’s Articles”>Overclocking & Computer Modification</a></strong><p>




