• We’re currently investigating an issue related to the forum theme and styling that is impacting page layout and visual formatting. The problem has been identified, and we are actively working on a resolution. There is no impact to user data or functionality, this is strictly a front-end display issue. We’ll post an update once the fix has been deployed. Thanks for your patience while we get this sorted.

AGP Question When Overclocking

Tincup

Junior Member
Just wondering how overclocking the CPU affects the AGP bus speed using these ratios; 3:3:1 / 4:3:1 / 4:4:1. I would guess it depends on the FSB...so let's use an FSB of 120MHz...or whatever you would like to use to explain this.
I don't want to burn up my video card (Hercules GeForce 2 GTS Ultra) in the AGP slot!

Thanks for your help!
 
Depends what chipset you are using.

If you are using a BX chipset (which I don't think you are), then it does not provide FSB 1/2 mutliplier....so if you were to use an FSB of 120MHz, the best the BX can do it 2/3, so that's 80Mhz....quite high and probably not a comfortable speed to run at.

The VIA chipsets and the i815(E/P) chipsets provide 1/2 multipliers. Depending on your motherboard (you haven't provided any details), it may switch from 2/3 to 1/2, giving you an AGP speed of 60MHz.

Strictly speaking, 80MHz AGP should be OK for GeForce cards....they have been known to withstand speeds of 100MHz AGP, so I wouldn't be too worried. Just as long as the FSB AGP ratio is not 1:1.

Edit: read your other post....I think the SA6R has manual mutliplier settings for the AGP FSB ratio....1:1, 2:3, 1:2. At 120MHz FSB, it will kind of underperform at 60MHz AGP....probably best to stick to the 2:3 setting unless you find that your system is unstable.
 
Back
Top