Quote:
Originally Posted by alancsalt 
The top one is your mobo, I think.
I couldn't even find a good one for my RIVE (Rampage 4 Extreme), so good luck finding a basic step by step one. Yours is Asus, so it should be "fairly" similar to the RIVE. Von Dutch is correct that starting out with XMP on could limit your cpu overclock. It's also common knowledge that AI Suite is far from ideal, overvolts, and clashes with common monitoring programs. Best to do it in bios.
However, if your board has an auto-overclock button, you can try it, read off the voltages/save a profile (In bios/"tools"?) and then back down from that. This is not a simple procedure. You should only change one setting at a time, just to be sure of what is doing what. If you are looking for stability you might be running Prime95 or IBT between changes. If you are just chasing maximum overclock that you can validate CPUZ in, then CPUZ is your only test. There are a lot of settings on modern motherboards. Better to read or view the above links to get some idea what they do.
The important ones are vcore, vccsa/vccio, vtt cpu voltage, and dram voltage. They are the ones you would "fiddle with" and change. There are others you just set and forget. Generally it is a long process of trial and error to get a maximum overclock, and it's not much good copying someone elses profile for that because every parts combination is different, even if they look the same on paper. Components from the same manufacturer will vary in capability.

The top one is your mobo, I think.
I couldn't even find a good one for my RIVE (Rampage 4 Extreme), so good luck finding a basic step by step one. Yours is Asus, so it should be "fairly" similar to the RIVE. Von Dutch is correct that starting out with XMP on could limit your cpu overclock. It's also common knowledge that AI Suite is far from ideal, overvolts, and clashes with common monitoring programs. Best to do it in bios.
However, if your board has an auto-overclock button, you can try it, read off the voltages/save a profile (In bios/"tools"?) and then back down from that. This is not a simple procedure. You should only change one setting at a time, just to be sure of what is doing what. If you are looking for stability you might be running Prime95 or IBT between changes. If you are just chasing maximum overclock that you can validate CPUZ in, then CPUZ is your only test. There are a lot of settings on modern motherboards. Better to read or view the above links to get some idea what they do.
The important ones are vcore, vccsa/vccio, vtt cpu voltage, and dram voltage. They are the ones you would "fiddle with" and change. There are others you just set and forget. Generally it is a long process of trial and error to get a maximum overclock, and it's not much good copying someone elses profile for that because every parts combination is different, even if they look the same on paper. Components from the same manufacturer will vary in capability.
OK alancsalt I'll look at them First and will what I can see, but I mean the best stable performance with my system not the maximum OC for it
, Even I'm not stable right now don't know why I got hang every time over my Windows and when happening have to reboot and back opening again. that's my **** problem with my system (i7 3930k + 16 GB what ever @1333 or @2133 same right now) So how is that happening!!!!!!First of all that's for your reply












































