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#371
Just so you know Solar, mine needs 1.285V for my daily 4.6GHz OC.
I will update the leaderboards in a bit.
Just so you know Solar, mine needs 1.285V for my daily 4.6GHz OC.
I will update the leaderboards in a bit.
Paul,You know something I was figuring how Intel voltages work and you are spot on seems like I figured I can drop a little lower temps are excellent
I imagine the voltage match for me would be 1.275 for 4.6 stable 1.285 to 1.290 stable 4.7 I'm going to try it later but if my voltage match is correct I can hit this speed and still be under 80c or just on the rim of 80c
That's about what mine runs. 4.5-4.6GHz needs about 1.275-1.280 volts and the temps are really good. Mine is stable @ about 1.250v(4.5GHz) if I really get in there and tweak the settings, but I've since restored factory defaults and haven't spent the time to fine tune it yet. I'm guessing you are using an offset of about +.025-ish. Do you have SpeedStep technology enabled so it will throttle up and down as needed? I have some errands to run, but I promise I will take some screencaps of my BIOS and explain some of the things I've done. Mostly I've just followed that OC guide I sent you.
I found the voltage increases become quite steep after 4.6GHz.
Also I run mine in offset mode Solar, to get 4.6GHz at 1.285V I set the offset voltage to +0.010
Leaderboards updated.
Also, you could drop your BCLK back down to 100MHz if you wanted. That BCLK affects CPU/RAM/PCI Express and unless you are squeezing the last bit of frequency out of it, it's not usually worth messing with.
OK, to figure out your offset voltage, take your manual voltage, for instance, 1.275, open up Core Temp and start stress testing it.....Prime 95, AIDA64, IBT, whatever. Notice your VID right below your frequency. While stressing, it may bounce around some but you want to watch it for a few minutes and note what the most common number is. Mine jumps from 1.2510-1.2660 but stays at 1.2660 most of the time. Subtract your VID from your STABLE manual voltage and that is what your offset needs to be. Note that it can be +/-. So, if your stable manual voltage is 1.2750 and your most common VID is say 1.2550 then your offset would be +.020. If your VID is larger than your stable manual voltage, you will end up with a - number, which is acceptable. Offset and "Auto" is a generic way of feeding it what voltage it thinks it needs, but that may be way too liberal. In a nutshell, using an offset is a way of overclocking and yet undervolting at the same time, which is great. You want to find your stable manual voltage first and foremost, then you can apply an offset so you aren't running max voltage for an overclock while idling at 1600MHz.
LG makes very good TV's. The have excellent pictures on them. One of the first things to do is turm off the auto sensor that fools with the picture settings when you are watching TV. Another good tip is to ensure you are not in SHOP or Demo mode which can be very annoying. There are 4 LG monitors in this house and an LG TV is high on the list when we need a new one. Plus I have been repairing TV's since 1975 until 2010 when I got my desk flying job and then went on disability. LG stands for Lucky Goldstar and Life's Good. LG bought out Zenith.
I wish I knew what you guys are talking about. In normal non gaming use do Intel chips thrash AMD or is it pretty much the same till you get into the upper CPU i7 top range chips. I have AMD systems apart from a PIII at 800Mhz from April 2000. Still runs XP. I am happy with my systems. Don't overclock, do light gaming and run virtual images and generally muck about with OS's to keep busy.