exar333
Diamond Member
- Feb 7, 2004
- 8,518
- 8
- 91
Originally posted by: RaptureMe
Sorry dont mean to be so defensive just stating the facts.
Yeah I totaly agree with you though not everyone is going to get the same overclock as me and mostly its luck of the draw.
But from the many posts I have seen and read alot of people are getting the same results as me with using the same type of cooling.
As for stress testing so far I have used Prime,Cinbench,all the future marks/Pc marks,and a few verious others..
I totally admit though when hammered and maxed out when stressing I do get higher temps much higher like 70-75c.
But this is only in those stress testing programs.
I can max out all the cores for hours on end using video editing programs,Compression,Converting, or run several games at once and never see temps ever get that high.
Still though you guys say 50-55c is good but that seems abit high to me and 70-75c is just nuts.
If I ever seen my system hit temps that high in everyday use I would not clock to these speeds..
I guess it comes down to what you define as "stable". Personally, I don't consider my system stable unless i CAN stress-test with Prime, OCCT, etc. and both NOT hit excessive temperatures and have instabilities. My i7 920 will post at ~4.2Ghz, but the heat is too much at full load. I preferred to keep my temps below 60C at all times, so I have mine sitting at 3.6ghz with a push-pull fan system as well.
"Too hot" and "stable" are very relative terms, and that is why most AT posters consider "load" to be 100% on all cores for more than just a minute or two. I kep my 8 instances of Prime running for 12 hours before I considered it initially stable. Then I stress tested for 1-2 days while monitoring temps to ensure it was 100% reliable. Could I get a faster OC if I wasn't running such demanding programs, yes. But down the road I know that what ever program I run will not exceed the tests I have verified I am comfortable with.
