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Asus said:Well you can use MSI's core center but the OC won't stick. It's not like you OCed in bios or anything. It is a good way to find a stable OC without a bunch of reboots.
Just don't increase the voltage just yet. That's a last ditch effort to get it higher and stable. That's if you don't want to kill your CPU. Try it on the stock heatsink first. I'd let it get up to about 55C before you should slow down on the OCing.
After you get into OCing more then think about heatsink and fan solutions for better cooling. Always stress test your CPU either by playing games or running tests after you OC. Don't just keep increasing and increasing it til it crashes. Just because it is stable now doesn't mean it will stay that way. That's why you have to test it with stressful apps.
Get to know where your CMOS reset jumper is. You'll be using it if you OC in the Bios. Also if there is a way to lock the AGP/PCI MHz then set it to 66Mhz/33MHz (instead of AUTO).
ok, i was able to overclock it to 2362mhz and it idles at around 45 still but if it goes a little over 55 then that is real bad or should i just leave it, cause it's getting to 52 after i play css just a little bit, is this bad does mine run hotter than most peoples or what?Asus said:Look in your manual for your motherboard. It's a jumper or set of pins that when shorted they will clear your settings in the Bios. If you OC from the Bios and it does not boot then you will need to reset the settings back to default via the CMOS Jumper.
There are 3 pins and a jumper that covers 2 pins. Example, if it's on pins 1 and 2 then it might do nothing. If you put it on pins 2 and 3 then it will reset the Bios. You don't leave it there though. Just to short the pins.
mine is 2.2ghz stock. when i oc'd it it idled around 43 and the only thing that i was kinda worried about was the temps when from there to 50 pretty fast i didn't know if it would go much further...if i could get to 2.4ghz i would be really happy but i know that 2.3 is really stable i just don't know how far temperatures usually rise and what my cpu non-oc'd idle temps are and under load temps are... does anyone know? and is 200mhz worth o.c.ing if it really cuts down on the cpu's life?Asus said:Dont mess with the Cmos jumper unless you mess up and it freezes. It's just a way to get your PC back booting correctly.
I wouldn't go quite that far OCing without testing first. Maybe to 2.2GHz. You are fine on temps. Over 60C is about when it's 'too hot'. Your machine will probably auto shut off at around 70C.
how big of increments should i up the fsb by while o.c.ing in the system bios even though i know where it's stable at about 200mhz?Asus said:Should be fine on the CPU's life, as long as it's stable and the voltage isn't raised much. 200MHz can help a bit, especially in HL2 and games like that.
ok, but how big of increments should i do when i'm overclocking or should i do the whole 20 fsb at once?Asus said:I'm guessing 2200Mhz (2.2GHz) = 11x 200Mhz.
So if you put the FSB up to 210 then that would be (11x210) 2.3GHz.
220 FSB would be 2.4GHz.
Why spend £10 on a fan when 50p will do? :EJoims said:lol jabberwock u cheapskate
jabberwock95 said:Why spend £10 on a fan when 50p will do? :E
I daydream about what I could do with 20 80mm fans. For example I could glue them all together in huge blocks and replace the sides of my case. Now that is airflow. Then I could take it to a lan party and aim it at other people to put them off.
jabberwock95 said:Why spend £10 on a fan when 50p will do? :E
I daydream about what I could do with 20 80mm fans. For example I could glue them all together in huge blocks and replace the sides of my case. Now that is airflow. Then I could take it to a lan party and aim it at other people to put them off.