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Nov 18th, 2004 12:43 PM
MetalMilitia Shame you need a wind tunnel to keep the thing cool.
Nov 18th, 2004 08:44 AM
AChimp The max the motherboard lets you overclock is 30%, if I remember correctly. It goes 5, 10, 15, 30.

That can still get you up to nearly 4GHz with a 3.0 P4.
Nov 18th, 2004 04:07 AM
MetalMilitia yea there are those toms hardware videos where they take the heatskink off a few different processors while running UT2003 and the P4s just downclock themselves and save the processor while the athlons burst into flames.
Nov 17th, 2004 10:55 PM
AChimp The new Asus P4 boards overclock based on percentages. If they see that something is going to die, the motherboard reboots and sets everything back to normal.
Nov 17th, 2004 09:40 PM
Raize
Quote:
Originally Posted by MetalMilitia
Raize can probably give you a better explanation, im too lazy and my motherboard sucks to much to OC my processor by more than a few MHz so i dont have much expierence.
Actually you did a decent enough job.

The only thing I would add is that you should be careful. I have a buddy that likes to overclock and he always consults me and shit. He was able to get his computer overclocked about 50% and it was still running at an ultra-cool 35% celsius.

But, like all things that appear to be fine, it turned out he didn't account for the fact that upping his motherboard speed put undue strain on all his slots, not just the AGP card, RAM, and processor. That eventually led to his sound card frying. It could have led to his network card dying (as he didn't have an onboard one).

The only advice I can give is to be careful that you don't try to push too much through the pipe. Just because things seem to be working fine doesn't mean your PCI cards aren't going to shit out on you or that at the top end your processor isn't burning a hole in your heatsink.
Nov 17th, 2004 05:09 PM
MetalMilitia It would take some time to explain but you basically have to reaserach... FSB, Voltages and find out what core your processor has (CPUz should be able to tell you) .
Adjust the clock settings in your BIOS but do it incrementally at about 5-10 mhz then test, and by test i mean leave it running superPI for quite a while.
Monitor temperatures with a program such as speedfan and make sure the core temp doesn't go far over 60 under full load.

I havent ever used a P4 motherboard or processor (for overclockign anyway) so i dont know if they generally have PCI lock so AGP and PCI speeds are not automatically changed when you adjust the FSB but if its a decent motherboard it shoudl do. (running AGP at over 70mhz is likely to fubar someting)

Overclocking memory is done in the bios also but depending on the quality of the RAM results can vary. Ideally you would run it 1:1 with the FSB but i dunno how possible that is on a P4.

Raize can probably give you a better explanation, im too lazy and my motherboard sucks to much to OC my processor by more than a few MHz so i dont have much expierence.
Nov 17th, 2004 08:32 AM
Goldensoldier Wow dude, i thought i knew things about kilo and mega and giga....i knew shit, i still have alot to learn about speeds... hey does anyone know how to overclock or if possible with a Intel P4 2.66 ghz? Or does anyone know to how to overclock ram? If that is possible?
Nov 15th, 2004 10:27 PM
Raize
Quote:
Originally Posted by Ninjavenom
kilo -> mega -> giga -> peda -> tera


I may have switched peda and tera, not sure.
Yeah. it's tera first, then "peta". I don't know if peda has really been accepted as a proper replacement for "peta" but I've heard people use it. You may have heard it too, which is why you have it typed that way, but plenty of others have typed it that way too.

Here's an expanded list as far as I know:

kilo > mega > giga > tera > peta > exa > zetta > zotta (yotta?) > bronto

Bronto is like sextillion bytes though, and I don't think the entirety of the storage space in the world takes up more than a few hundred exabytes right now, so we got a ways to go.

I pulled most of this from a thread with this interesting tidbit:
Hiroyuki Goto, 21, the current world record holder for the most digits of Pi memorized, required over nine hours to recite 42000+ digits.
Nov 14th, 2004 04:18 PM
ArrowX hairy man ass
Nov 14th, 2004 06:36 AM
BlueOatmeal Man I kick so much ass!
Nov 14th, 2004 06:24 AM
EisigerBiskuit You stole my joke!
Nov 14th, 2004 06:07 AM
BlueOatmeal



HAHAHAhahAhAHAHhahHAHHA GET IT????

I AM A LAFF RIOT!
Nov 12th, 2004 01:42 PM
Goldensoldier o0o0o ok i got ya. And tera is the fastest as of right now i take it...
Nov 11th, 2004 03:35 PM
AChimp Tera comes after giga.

You can't compare flops with hertz because they are two separate units of measurement and there is no conversion. Flops are floating point operations per second. Hertz is cycles per second.
Nov 11th, 2004 02:55 PM
Ninjavenom kilo -> mega -> giga -> peda -> tera


I may have switched peda and tera, not sure.
Nov 11th, 2004 02:13 PM
Goldensoldier
Teraflops?

What is the difference from teraflops with Ghz? The fastest ghz is like 3.06ghz and the highest teraflop is 11.47? Here is an article on the fastest computer in the world... its an IBM. Thats right, an IBM. But what is the difference??


http://www.research.ibm.com/bluegene/

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