I just got the pcmods.com 4 switch .. 6watts perswitch fan controlling baybus and i was wondering ... how would i do it so i can put more than one fan per switch.. there is a little place when you put the black then red wire and use the srewdriver to press down on the wires... do i put more than...
I need one of those fan controlling baybus'.. i found one for $23 on f.r.o.z.e.n.c.p.u.c.o.m that has 4 switches in which each switch can be turned 12v, off, or pre-defined voltage (5V-11V lownoise)... i was thinking about getting that one ... im going to hook up 8 fans.. each swtich can hold 6W...
the things you could do are
1. Lower the temp in room (biggest helper)
2. Add more intake fans, even rear (help more than outake trust me, lowered my temps 10c when i tryed it)
3. Put your computer under a vent or air conditioner hole
i think he underclocked his system (videocard) ;)
to overclock it, you have to make the mhz numbers go higher (lamemen terms)
and wtf is up with the 7mhz overclock, my granny could do better than that
i ran sandra burn-in test for 20 times with amd athlon xp 1900+ at 1740 at an fsb of 145... with cas 2 at first... and well it was unstable and reboot... but for cas 2.5 at the same speed with a voltage of 2.55 it passed 20 times the cpu and mem burn in test... then an hour of 3dmark.. no...
How much better is cas 2 over 2.5... I had to up my voltage from 2.55 to 2.85 to get windows to boot... is it worth the extra voltage and heat generation?
Sorry for posting again but ss there a "tweaked" bios version for the Kr7a-133r motherboard that you can raise the voltage for core higher than 1.85V or another way that voltage can be raised higher than 1.85V....???? because i would like to try to run it at 1.90v but voltage for core can only...
Is there a "tweaked" bios version for the Kr7a-133r motherboard that you can raise the voltage for core higher than 1.85V....???? because i would like to try to run it at 1.90v but voltage for core can only from 1.1V to 1.85V...any suggestions
I know Prime 95 does a more thorough test... but it tests for calculations, every little detail... but does this really determine how stable your overclock is... or would 3dmark or other bench marking tests be more precise as to stabability and not just every single calculation done by the processor
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