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Excellent guide, have started overclocking and at the moment I'm sitting at 2.9ghz but I can't continue for a few days. I'm hoping I can get atleast 3.5, especially with my new cooler.
 
Hi All.

New here my 1st post. Sorry I do not type well etc. Looks like a nice thread, thanks. I had been waiting on a new vid card maybe a nv 570 or ti560 before I try and over clock some, might never happen tho. The vid card that is.

I had seen both Linus I5 videos at YouTube, just vid 1 near same mobo but he was using 4 stix of memory at 1.65v and I think vid 2 was I7 and HT on a Giga mobo.



* Part 2 is on page #8 post 75

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Llqhe...mbedded#at=121

4GHz is what I wanted to shoot for from the start. I have seen near exact mobo and same cpu I5 750 same cooler @ better than 4.2GHz but was using corsair ram. 4 is my goal but would be happy with 3.8GHz. I think it should do the 4 pretty easy tho. This Crucial ram is said very MSI friendly and said follows along and over clocks well too. I know my way around in the bios pretty good and plan to copy and print any info I might need before I try and over clock my rig.

Most all I do is play pc games and make game play videos. Games like Borderlands GOTY FO3 GOTY Stalker games Bioshock games Mafia2 JustCause2 etc. So going by the guide in the first post or these 2 videos and my specs, do you folks think I should have any problems? What about any final tweaks to the settings posted? Can they be any more exact? I understand I may have to tweak them a lil. Are those voltages considered safe?

I know it is risks in over clocking. I can not afford new stuff. I think as long as voltages are in what is said safe range I should be ok. I am more afraid of oc genie than good manual instructions.

Also my memory is sold as T1. I know it is few that is, most is or said T2 or more so because AMD can not run at T1. Well it is confusing. I think many of the stix can run T1 and or because Intel can do T2 why sell both types or different stickers and confuse folks? My system runs perfect as is. I have seen same mem on msi mobos I think P55 oc to cl7 and still T1. So I hope no probs, Or I can change it to T2 I guess? For the record I am fine @ cl9 and for the price. I was looking at some cl8 Rip Jaws but they are said Rig Jaws and MSI mobos do not like each other very much. So I picked this memory. Maybe I am thinking to much- sorry.

* Here ya go.. A mod at msi forums. Ops my bad, I see his is a 4gig kit but same timings etc..>

" H55-GD65/BIOS 1.2, i3 530 @ 3.81 GHz, Cooler Master 212+
Crucial 2x2GB CT2KIT25664BA1339, 7, 8, 8, 20, 1T, 1.47V, 1404 MHz
XP Home/SP3"

I would love to be in the 4GHz and above club.

Thanks for any help or more info in advance.
 
hey people
complete noob here on overclocking.
im planning on getting a new pc soon and i want to overclock the cpu to ~3.5 GHz.

the computer will be an HP pro 3130 microtower (XT291EA)
Intel Core i7 870 @ 2.93 GHz
8GB DDR3 1333MHZ RAM
Nvidia GT420 2GB (i know is not the best but im not a heavy gamer and i will mostly use it to play PS2 Games on pcsx2)

so what i want is to overclock it at ~3.5 GHz to get a reasonable preformance when playing pcsx2.i would appreciate if you could tell me what bus speed should i use and the voltages of the Vcore, CPU VTT and CPU PLL and since the default multiplier is (22 or 21?) i was thinking of 168 bus speed to get around 3.6 GHz.
what are your thoughts and suggestions?
thanks
 
Same i have an HP computer as well and the bios has no options for overclocking. If you want to overclock you pretty much need to build your own custom computer. If you want you could buy that HP and then replace the Motherboard with an aftermarket one, this would allow you to overclock.
 
Quote:


Originally Posted by nikolas
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hey people
complete noob here on overclocking.
im planning on getting a new pc soon and i want to overclock the cpu to ~3.5 GHz.

the computer will be an HP pro 3130 microtower (XT291EA)
Intel Core i7 870 @ 2.93 GHz
8GB DDR3 1333MHZ RAM
Nvidia GT420 2GB (i know is not the best but im not a heavy gamer and i will mostly use it to play PS2 Games on pcsx2)

so what i want is to overclock it at ~3.5 GHz to get a reasonable preformance when playing pcsx2.i would appreciate if you could tell me what bus speed should i use and the voltages of the Vcore, CPU VTT and CPU PLL and since the default multiplier is (22 or 21?) i was thinking of 168 bus speed to get around 3.6 GHz.
what are your thoughts and suggestions?
thanks

The only way you're going to overclock would be with a aftermarket motherboard
Image
 
The only way you would be able to over clock is by using a software over clock. You could use a program like ClockGen. I used it to over clock my old HP Pentium D. I was able to bring the CPU from 3Ghz to 3.3Ghz pretty easily. The only problem is that your settings are very limited and you have make sure you stress test and the program ahas to be opened each time you start windows. But it does help, so if you really want to, get that program and play around with it.

The hard part though is that you will need to look for a specific chip on your motherboard. Just so you know, if you find it and its not on the list, just pick a similar number and you should be fine.
 
I currently have an i7-870 (2.93). I followed these guides, as well as a few video step-by-step tutorials, but could only manage the "EZ-OC" of 3.6 GHz. I went to 4.0 and got it, but my computer would crash after about 30 minutes.

I played with the voltages, but it just became a tedious game of rebooting for hours and that's just not worth my time.

Hopefully I will enjoy a difference with the mild overclock I did achieve.

Still, this is a great guide.

Anyone else get problems like this?
 
Quote:


Originally Posted by doogansquest
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I currently have an i7-870 (2.93). I followed these guides, as well as a few video step-by-step tutorials, but could only manage the "EZ-OC" of 3.6 GHz. I went to 4.0 and got it, but my computer would crash after about 30 minutes.

I played with the voltages, but it just became a tedious game of rebooting for hours and that's just not worth my time.

Hopefully I will enjoy a difference with the mild overclock I did achieve.

Still, this is a great guide.

Anyone else get problems like this?

You might want to check on the voltages of you RAM along with the multiplier that you're using too.
 
Quote:


Originally Posted by Chilly
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You might want to check on the voltages of you RAM along with the multiplier that you're using too.

I have 8 gb (4x2gb) of G.Skill Ripjaw Series PC12800 1600 9-9-9-24. Stock voltages are listed at 1.5v.

It may have been a memory failure that caused the crash, but the error screen rarely stayed up for more than a second before the reboot would automate, so I couldn't tell you. On my mobo, the memory light would indicate red briefly, but then would go away.

I guess I don't want to go through a dozen more crashes just to find the right voltage for my memory.

I'm running around 3.6 right now, which is fine; I basically game and HD Stream with this computer. I was really hoping to hit 4 though, because some games (Dawn of War 2, Starcraft 2) are heavily CPU dependent. They run smooth enough now, but I'm greedy.
Image
 
Here's something else to try to get your 4Ghz:
1. Set CPU multiplier (ratio) to 24
2. Set BCLK frequency to 170
3. Set QPI frequency to the lowest possible setting
4. Set DRAM frequency to 1360 (8xBCLK)
5. Set CPU voltage to 1.38v (or 1.4V, but less is best)
6. Set IMC voltage to 1.25v (may not need this much)
7. Enable Load-Line Calibration

Running a lower bclk puts less stress on the system. The 870 allows a static CPU multipler of 24, so use it! Beware that with Hyperthreading enabled, temps will probably go very high at 4Ghz (and you may be able get by with less than 1.38v). If the above fails, bring down the bclk until you're stable. If you run 160 bclk (3.8Ghz OC), you can set your RAM freq to 1600 (10xbclk). If all this fails, crud...bummer
mad.gif
. Good Luck!
 
Quote:


Originally Posted by *AcidBath*
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Here's something else to try to get your 4Ghz:
1. Set CPU multiplier (ratio) to 24
2. Set BCLK frequency to 170
3. Set QPI frequency to the lowest possible setting
4. Set DRAM frequency to 1360 (8xBCLK)
5. Set CPU voltage to 1.38v (or 1.4V, but less is best)
6. Set IMC voltage to 1.25v (may not need this much)
7. Enable Load-Line Calibration

Running a lower bclk puts less stress on the system. The 870 allows a static CPU multipler of 24, so use it! Beware that with Hyperthreading enabled, temps will probably go very high at 4Ghz (and you may be able get by with less than 1.38v). If the above fails, bring down the bclk until you're stable. If you run 160 bclk (3.8Ghz OC), you can set your RAM freq to 1600 (10xbclk). If all this fails, crud...bummer
Image
. Good Luck!

I followed your tips, and it seemed to work. I was able to get 4.1 stable, but it ran hot under load. In prime95, it would hover between 73-82 degrees, but then spike up over 90-95 for stretches of time that I just wasn't comfortable with. I lowered the voltage and got the same results. It never crashed, but I just didn't like the temp spikes.

I then adjusted the bclk to 160, and got a 3.85 OC that ran pretty well under load. more in the 66-74 ball park, with spikes around 84.

I imagine if I upgraded my cooler a little bit, I'd probably hit that 4.1 and stay at good temps. I just don't want to spend the money, remove this cooler, clean the chip, reapply paste, sit new cooler, etc. Maybe a project I can pursue in a few months.

Thanks for the help!

Oh, one more thing: Did I make the right choice to dial it down with those temps? I know I don't run any programs that would ever demand 100% load, but I shouldn't even risk it, right?
 
Glad you got some results you are comfortable with. 90c is my cutoff while stress testing and mid 80s I'll live with so your decision to drop back to 160 was a good one. You can get much lower temps by disabling hyperthreading, but that's ditching a main feature of the i7 8xx processors. I can only reach a stable 4Ghz with HT disabled due to temps, so I stay at 3.8 with HT. Definitely get your voltages down low as possible, 1.38v is probably overkill for a 3.8 OC; you might get as low as 1.28v. And BTW, there is a rep system to award helpful advise, so if you please show your appreciation by giving my rep a bump, it shows up when you are logged in. Enjoy!
 
Quote:


Originally Posted by *AcidBath*
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Glad you got some results you are comfortable with. 90c is my cutoff while stress testing and mid 80s I'll live with so your decision to drop back to 160 was a good one. You can get much lower temps by disabling hyperthreading, but that's ditching a main feature of the i7 8xx processors. I can only reach a stable 4Ghz with HT disabled due to temps, so I stay at 3.8 with HT. Definitely get your voltages down low as possible, 1.38v is probably overkill for a 3.8 OC; you might get as low as 1.28v. And BTW, there is a rep system to award helpful advise, so if you please show your appreciation by giving my rep a bump, it shows up when you are logged in. Enjoy!

+1 Rep added!

I am running 1.29v right now. I also installed an extra case fan I had on the side of my Antec 902. It brought the temps down another 3-4 degrees on average. Most recent runs stayed pretty well below 85 at all times during a stress test.

Thanks again!
 
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