OK, per a couple of user's requests, I have conducted some testing (last night) that in fact prove that MSI's mobo overclocks GF6 cards. The next section is a detail of the hardware that the test was conducted on:
AMD Athlon 64 3200+ (2.00GHz, Winchester Core, 1.40v)
MSI K8N Neo2 Platinum (NVIDIA nForce3 250-Ultra Chipset, PCB Rev 1.0; BIOS Rev 1.4)
1024MB Mushkin Enhanced PC3200 DDR Memory (400MHz; 2.5-3-3-8 Timings)
Videocard(s):
----XFX NVIDIA GeForce 6800GT 256MB Video Card (BIOS Version: 5.40.02.15.01)
----BFG Asylum GeForce FX 5700 Ultra 128MB Video Card (Unsure which BIOS version)
Creative Sound Blaster Audigy 2 ZS Sound Card
Western Digital WD2000JB (200GB) Hard Drive (7200rpm; 8MB Cache)
Western Digital WD1200JB (120GB) Hard Drive (7200rpm; 8MB Cache)
NEC ND3500AG DVD+/-RW Drive
Artec COMBO52X16C Drive
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Below are the steps I took, with my findings bolded:
1.) The first thing I did was to reset the BIOS to "Fail-Safe Defaults". This puts every BIOS setting to its factory, most conservative defaults. The only things I changed were the settings for my hard drives, as well as to enable the NVIDIA networking controller. I booted into Windows, opened the NVIDIA control panel, and then the CoolBits tab. The card then showed a 350\1000 clock speed, identical to the official speeds for a 6800GT. The GFFX 5700U also posted its default clock speeds of 475\900.
2.) I then proceeded to go back into the BIOS, and changed ONLY the setting for aggressive timing, which as many of you pointed out, shouldn't matter, but my earlier findings led me to believe otherwise. This, I will mention again, is the ONLY setting that I changed, I left everything else alone. I booted into Windows, went to the NVIDIA control panel, then to CoolBits, and my 6800GT card reported a clock speed of 374\1070, whereas the GFFX 5700U reported the same clock speeds of 475\900.
3.) Now that I was 110% certain that the "Aggressive Timing" setting was the culprit behind overclocking my videocard, I then proceeded to try out those "secret key combos" that I have seen reported in various places. I tried them ALL, and none of them did anything whatsoever. This leads me to believe, that at least with this BIOS rev for the Neo2 (version 1.4), there is no key combo to enable overclocking. Your results with this aspect may vary.
3a.) I do not know whether this works for the 6600GT, but I assume that it does, as it, from what I can tell, affects all AGP GF 6x00 cards, but I cannot be certain.
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Here is an EXACT copy of the description of Aggressive Timing in the PDF Manual:
Aggressive Timing
This item allows you to enable or disable the memory clock. When [Enabled] is selected,
the timing delay of memory will be shorten to increase the performance. Setting
options: [Enabled], [Disabled].
This doesn't say that it overclocks the videocard, but this setting is the SOLE culprit in this situation. It is definitely responsible for the overclocks, and my be responsible for me having 4 videocards biting the bullet on me :shocked:
Anyway, I hope this helps, and I will update this post as necessary with new findings.
AMD Athlon 64 3200+ (2.00GHz, Winchester Core, 1.40v)
MSI K8N Neo2 Platinum (NVIDIA nForce3 250-Ultra Chipset, PCB Rev 1.0; BIOS Rev 1.4)
1024MB Mushkin Enhanced PC3200 DDR Memory (400MHz; 2.5-3-3-8 Timings)
Videocard(s):
----XFX NVIDIA GeForce 6800GT 256MB Video Card (BIOS Version: 5.40.02.15.01)
----BFG Asylum GeForce FX 5700 Ultra 128MB Video Card (Unsure which BIOS version)
Creative Sound Blaster Audigy 2 ZS Sound Card
Western Digital WD2000JB (200GB) Hard Drive (7200rpm; 8MB Cache)
Western Digital WD1200JB (120GB) Hard Drive (7200rpm; 8MB Cache)
NEC ND3500AG DVD+/-RW Drive
Artec COMBO52X16C Drive
-------------------------------------------------
Below are the steps I took, with my findings bolded:
1.) The first thing I did was to reset the BIOS to "Fail-Safe Defaults". This puts every BIOS setting to its factory, most conservative defaults. The only things I changed were the settings for my hard drives, as well as to enable the NVIDIA networking controller. I booted into Windows, opened the NVIDIA control panel, and then the CoolBits tab. The card then showed a 350\1000 clock speed, identical to the official speeds for a 6800GT. The GFFX 5700U also posted its default clock speeds of 475\900.
2.) I then proceeded to go back into the BIOS, and changed ONLY the setting for aggressive timing, which as many of you pointed out, shouldn't matter, but my earlier findings led me to believe otherwise. This, I will mention again, is the ONLY setting that I changed, I left everything else alone. I booted into Windows, went to the NVIDIA control panel, then to CoolBits, and my 6800GT card reported a clock speed of 374\1070, whereas the GFFX 5700U reported the same clock speeds of 475\900.
3.) Now that I was 110% certain that the "Aggressive Timing" setting was the culprit behind overclocking my videocard, I then proceeded to try out those "secret key combos" that I have seen reported in various places. I tried them ALL, and none of them did anything whatsoever. This leads me to believe, that at least with this BIOS rev for the Neo2 (version 1.4), there is no key combo to enable overclocking. Your results with this aspect may vary.
3a.) I do not know whether this works for the 6600GT, but I assume that it does, as it, from what I can tell, affects all AGP GF 6x00 cards, but I cannot be certain.
-------------------------------------------------
Here is an EXACT copy of the description of Aggressive Timing in the PDF Manual:
Aggressive Timing
This item allows you to enable or disable the memory clock. When [Enabled] is selected,
the timing delay of memory will be shorten to increase the performance. Setting
options: [Enabled], [Disabled].
This doesn't say that it overclocks the videocard, but this setting is the SOLE culprit in this situation. It is definitely responsible for the overclocks, and my be responsible for me having 4 videocards biting the bullet on me :shocked:
Anyway, I hope this helps, and I will update this post as necessary with new findings.