CPU/PCI-E Clock Driving Control
The default setting is 800mv, with a range of voltage control offered between 700mv-1000mv. As this is a differential amplifier circuit, increasing voltage may actually decrease the clock signal accuracy due to increased power supply noise. Differential circuits are used in preference to single ended circuits because of their noise rejection and low voltage operating capabilities. Increasing voltage to these circuits in turn increases "nasties" such as overshoot and output clock signal jitter. This in turn counteracts the benefits of using a differential amplifier in the first place. We did experiment with various levels of overvoltage and found no gains in stability whatsoever, further cementing our beliefs that more is not always better.
and would it be better to hvae the lowest possible setting? or higher
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CPU Intel Core 2 Duo E8500 |
Motherboard GIGABYTE GA-X48T-DQ6 |
Memory OCZ Dual Channel 2048MB PC10600 DDR3 1333MHz |
Graphics Card MSI R4850-512M Radeon HD 4850 |
Hard Drive Seagate Barrabudea 7200.10 500gig |
Sound Card onboard |
Power Supply PC Power & Cooling Silencer 750-Watt |
Case Rocketfish |
CPU cooling XIGMATEK HDT-S1283 120mm Rifle CPU Cooler |
GPU cooling stock |
OS windows xp sp2 |
Monitor Samsung Touch of Color T220 22" Widescreen LCD |
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