Hi guys.
So i have my final pc build.
The new mem came today.
Now i want to give it a little juice by overclocking a little bit.
The specs are:
EVGA NForce 680i SLI Mobo
EVGA 8800 GTS
2Gb Corsair XMS2 800Mhz PC2 6400 CAS4
I dont know nothing about overcloking (literaly) so i would like some info from more experienced users so i can pull a little more from my machine.
Some CpuZ pics.
Thanks and i hope to hear some advices.
Replies
Not to mention, that I see absolutly no need to overclock this baby yet.
The memory is SLI ready. I went to the bios and check the memory part and its enabled. The Sli mode of the memories i mean.
my friend recently got his core duo 2 to 4.12 ghz, from the stock 1.8 ghz (iirc). it was crazy fast when running super pi, i think he got 14 second 1 m super pi times... possibly, my sucks but somehwhere around there.
he gets 31 sec 1 m times with it at stock... which is sad because that is what i get with my athlon 64 3200 overlcoked to 2.7 ghz and his is at 1.8 ghz.
I'm sure you can crank the fsb on that up a chunk, thus overclocking.
stock speed for 6300 is 1.86 GHz, 6600 is 2.4 GHz.
Got my 6300 at 3.22 GHz.
Not to mention, that I see absolutly no need to overclock this baby yet.
[/ QUOTE ]
No kidding. What is your reason for doing this, bitmap? When you overclock, you risk a number of failure issues and can shorten the lifespan of your components. That may be worth it if your hardware can't otherwise handle games you want to play, but I can't think of any games your new rig wouldn't handle fine at maximum resolution and detail.
[ QUOTE ]
Not to mention, that I see absolutly no need to overclock this baby yet.
[/ QUOTE ]
No kidding. What is your reason for doing this, bitmap? When you overclock, you risk a number of failure issues and can shorten the lifespan of your components. That may be worth it if your hardware can't otherwise handle games you want to play, but I can't think of any games your new rig wouldn't handle fine at maximum resolution and detail.
[/ QUOTE ]
this is a common misconception. you're not stressing your components more unless you raise the voltage. and even then, if you raise the voltage it really will not harm the hardware unless you riase it a lot. and you cna sometimes overlcok a fair ammount without needing to voltage raise. i have my processor overlcoked 700 mhz without raising the voltage, and its stable as a rock. and my friend got his core 2 duo to 2.5 ghz i think without any voltage raise.
the biggest risk you run is overheating... however you'll notice a lot of problems before somethign permenent happens. although i wouldn't go for 4.12 ghz on air though, my friend used his phase change unit he built, made his temps go around -50.
am i right? amd right? who's with me?
raise your hands! .. no.. anyone?
lol
so don't do that, lol, and you'll be fine.
edit: i just noticed i can't type overclocking correctly unless i really really try.
Over"cooking"
lol
[ QUOTE ]
[ QUOTE ]
Not to mention, that I see absolutly no need to overclock this baby yet.
[/ QUOTE ]
No kidding. What is your reason for doing this, bitmap? When you overclock, you risk a number of failure issues and can shorten the lifespan of your components. That may be worth it if your hardware can't otherwise handle games you want to play, but I can't think of any games your new rig wouldn't handle fine at maximum resolution and detail.
[/ QUOTE ]
this is a common misconception. you're not stressing your components more unless you raise the voltage. and even then, if you raise the voltage it really will not harm the hardware unless you riase it a lot. and you cna sometimes overlcok a fair ammount without needing to voltage raise. i have my processor overlcoked 700 mhz without raising the voltage, and its stable as a rock. and my friend got his core 2 duo to 2.5 ghz i think without any voltage raise.
the biggest risk you run is overheating... however you'll notice a lot of problems before somethign permenent happens. although i wouldn't go for 4.12 ghz on air though, my friend used his phase change unit he built, made his temps go around -50.
[/ QUOTE ]
I know how it works. I've killed one CPU (a Celeron 300A, of all things) and a pair of dimms by overclocking, so I'm not exactly keen on the process. Beyond that, I simply find things are more unstable in general - game lockups, rendertime errors in Max, etc.
Still, I don't object to overclocking in general, just when it's not terribly beneficial. If bitmap wants to play Unreal at 120fps instead of just 100fps, it's his call, but I don't see any point in it.
I think Bitmap understands that it's not completely necessary, but because he knows it's possible he wants to satisfy his curiosity. That said though, if you are a complete noob to overclocking then seriously, don't practice on your brand new beast of a system that just cost you a month's pay (maybe I don't know). If you really must see what it's all about then go buy an AMD socket A system off ebay for a few bux. Then if you leave a small crater in your bedroom floor, no big deal at least you still have the beast Make sure you get a Barton one though, they are awesome overclockers. I had a 2500+ that I whacked up to 3200+ speed with the stock cooler
[/ QUOTE ]
you said it. its pure curiosity. i wanted to see if i could get more of it. anyway. im very much happy with it right now. so i guess i'll pass until i know some more stuff about OC. i mean..
i dont even know what a FSB is or what it does. lol.
has it is i can play everything at full specs. rainbow six and what not.
Make sure you get a Barton one though, they are awesome overclockers. I had a 2500+ that I whacked up to 3200+ speed with the stock cooler
[/ QUOTE ]
Did the same thing with my last comp , though had an aftermarket air cooler.
But that doesn't compare to the overclockign potential of the 6300 core duo. Overclocking from 1.86 to 3 GHz (or more) on stock volts is the norm. Which is faster thant he stock speed of the x6800.
From newegg:
e6300 = $ 195.00
x6800 = $ 958.00
So you could actually blow up 4 of them (doubt that would happen), buy a 5th and only be $17 over what it would cost for one x6800 hehe.
The 6300 and 6400 have 2mb cache whereas the higher ones have 4mb. But from what I've read there is no noticable difference, and certainly not enough to warrant the price boost.
Bitmap, check out here http://forums.overclockers.co.uk/showthread.php?t=17612922 and dig through the forums for more info on overclocking. There is a lot of info on overclocking the processor you have so you can get a good idea of what you can get.
You have the best and most expensive equipment, and you can't live with it's speed? I would seriously not overclock unless you have a heavy cooling system already in place, preferably liquid based. From teh power consumption of the devices you already have, you are looking at an easy fry.
[/ QUOTE ]
if he overlcoks without raisingn the voltage it will be the exact same it is now, but faster. and a correction, apparently my friend overclocked his core 2 duo from 1.8 to 3.5 without a voltage raise, which is just nuts.
Just so you know, i'm a systems engineer by trade. Regardless of voltage settings you are forcing a card that was tested to run stable, to speeds it has not been rated for. The more output from a system, the more electricity shoved through at higher rates. It will generate more heat. The items he has already generate quite a bit, thats all I'm saying. Do what you want, but it's not covered in any warranty I know of.
[/ QUOTE ]
some large card manufacturers now have it in their warranty so that overclocking is covered as long as no volt mods have been performed.
as for not upping the voltage and getting an increase in heat... you're right but the increase is so minimal it might as well be not existant, and something that is not worth existing is also not worth worrying about. i've tested my system at stock and at 700 mhz over stock and maybe notice 1 celcius difference. however that kind of change could be from a slight gust of warm air going by, its minimal.
so many people are afriad of overclocking because of the irrational fear of "frying" something . i'll say it again, if you don't up the vcore you'll see not damage done to your components. if you do up your vcore you still won't see any damage unless you go too far.
all i am saying is he'll more than likely be fine.
Dude. Just print these out and stick them on your case. The more you have the faster!
[/ QUOTE ]
AHAHAH
damn, those are ugly!!
i dont know whats the deal.
im gonna update my 8800 drivers. since there are new ones. but i belive this only started to happen when i switched memeories.
Used this myself when I built this comp and got confirmation that it was faulty ram that was holding back my overclock, as one of the sticks was producing errors.
Run prime95 to test stability of your processor. I runs your processor at 100% doing calculations, and stops if it produces an error. So if you run it for several hours and there are no errors, your comp is stable.
To test a dual core, you'll need to run two instances of this, which you do by just running it from two different folders, then setting the 'affinity' in one to '0' and the other to '1'.
Monitor your temps with 'core temps' or intel Thermal Analysis Tool (TAT) for several minutes when you start this to make sure they are ok. When you're confident the core temps won't go higher you can leave it running. If there are no errors after several hours and the temperature is ok (try to stay under 60 C at full load) you are good to do.
Artificating sounds like a problem with the graphics card to me, from overheating or being overclocked too much as those things are known to cause it. Could be something else though I guess.
Fraid I can't help beyond that
however your problem bitmap just seems like a video updating problem, certain pixels aren't updating, more so a problem with the codec than anything hardware related, possibly the 8800 drivers too since they porcess the video on the graphics cards these days and the 8800's drivers are still pretty imature. i've actually had it a few times where i was watching a video and loaded up my game engine, and through certain parts of the menu i coukld see the viodeo playing (this is with the engine fullscreen), i've also had it happen to where i am working in photoshop and can see the video through the image in was working on (no bleeding or semi-transparenc,it was fully visible).
so odd things happen with video, that or as i said it could be the drivers. nothing too much to worry about.
although lupus is right, it is always a good idea to monitor your temps whether you're overlcoking or not. one time my habit of monitoring my temps saved my pc since it seemed a fan on the north bridge failed and my chipset temps were through the roof, some that can easily corrupt your windows install and even your partition.
although there is the possibility it could be your ram, but i doubt it, run memtest just to be sure. you should actually run memtest right when you install new ram just to be sure its good, otherwise rma it and try another pair, run memtest...etc.
so i updated the drivers yesterday with teh new forceware from nvidia version 97.92 and aparently everything is looking fine again. Jarrod that thing you said about bieing in photoshop and being able to see thru the image happened to me yesterday also. i guesse it was the drivers..
whats a cool program to monitorize the temperatures?
Upping the clock speed on a microprocessor generates more heat, with or without more voltage applied, period. If you overclock a microprocessor you run the risk of damaging it.
[/ QUOTE ]
yes, but i would say its a very, very, very, very minimal risk. its almsot like some of the people here are trying to use scare tactics on bitmap, lol. seriously, no worrys.
whats a cool program to monitorize the temperatures?
[/ QUOTE ]
It starts between your eyes and ends just above your upper lip. To quote Ralph Wigam "I smell like burning".
Seriously tho, it depends on what your mo-bo supports. Normally if it supports that kind of thing it, the software comes with it. I doubt it would work but you could try the version Intel or ASUS uses for theirs, who knows maybe you'll fry your system faster than over clocking it =P
For the cpu, some software take their readings from outside the cpu, and so give a less accurate result. Core Temps and Intel TAT take their readings from inside and so are more accurate. And will also give you readngs of both cores.
Also in many cases overclocking isn't actually 'overclocking'. Much of the time the lower chips in a family are actually higher ones that have been clocked down, to fill demand. I've read that all core duos are the same, but clocked down to the different speeds, and 2mb of the cache disabled in the 6300 and 6400. This theory seems to hold true considering how easily the 6300 chips match the 6700,without needing any increase in vcore.
So it's often a case of removing the underclock, instead of actually overclocking.