Thanks Patrick
A Guy
Any time mate
Quite true as Patrick said. I think even the lightest stress test does more work than about 90% of day-to-day usage will do.
Very true. Browsing, Word, e-mail doesn't care an iota for OCing. A few apps will but on the whole most light everyday tasks won't.
Personally I've not seen any real world increase in performance with any overclock in CPU clocks or RAM fiddling. These things will get better scores in bench tests though.
Since I game - I do notice a difference in some of them. But on the whole, like pretty much everyone else - it's only done for the fun/hobby aspect.
RAM and BCLK fiddling however - essentially none at all. Benchmark increases are nice, but ultimately they are just for fun and shouldn't be taken to seriously.
As a member of the Pointless Crowd, I drone on and on, never letting anyone get a word in edgewise until I start foaming at the mouth and falling over backwards.
:roflmao:
* Just to clarify - that comment was not directed at anybody in particular
At the end of the day our PC's are just that -
Personal Computers.
There is no one 'true' method or answer when it comes to testing.
I personally advocate my methods because I've found it's what works for
me.
It also can depend on the OC you are aiming for. 'Light OC's' don't need as much testing. But higher OC's where more variables and potential weak spots are introduced do make it easier to narrow down culprits.
Case in point for the pro overkill testing - when I failed the 8hr prime the other night, I knew I was on the right track with my target - but not quite there.
I adjusted settings (more vcore basically and lowering BCLK), did a 10 pass IBT max run. Passed. Even did a 7 pass memtest run to make sure it wasn't the extra mhz on the RAM. passed.
Did a 99 pass Crysis harbour benchmark run (to simulate a more 'realistic load scenario) passed.
I'm now at 10 or so hours into another Prime run. The two cores that failed on two runs are now still going strong.
By rights, the machine is now more 'stable' than it was before. And unless it is a b*stard and x124's randomly, then I'll use the machine as is and 'real world' test it.
By overkill testing, I've narrowed down the weak point - voltage.
It's a method I've been using for years and have personally found works for me for the most part compared to quick and dirty testing.