- Nov 14, 2000
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ok guys...back in the day there were 3 main components to OCing a system: CPU, memory, and the system bus/FSB (i left video cards out b/c i consider that to be peripheral, and not a main system component). for instance, it seemed just as important to OC the system bus on my old P4C 2.6 system as it was to OC the CPU and memory. if i increased the quad-pumped system bus from 200MHz to 250MHz, my FSB would go from 800MHz to 1000MHz. obviously the system bus had to be OCed in order to OC the CPU b/c Pentium 4's at the time did not have unlocked multipliers. memory relied on the system bus to a much lesser extent thanks to the use of FSB : DRAM ratios (which more or less functioned as multipliers for the memory)...but at the end of the day, typically a combination of a particular FSB : DRAM ratio and a tweaked FSB was necessary to OC memory with sufficient accuracy.
we now live in a world of CPUs w/ unlocked multipliers (well not really, but a good number of CPUs today allow multiplier manipulation). i understand the benefit of having access to both the system bus and multipliers for OCing, but i'm on the fence about the importance of the system bus speed these days. back in the days of the Pentium 4, there were no IMCs (integrated memory controllers) or on-die north bridges (CPU-NBs). in other words, the FSB could not be changed using multipliers, and could only be changed by changing the system bus speed. these days we have the CPU-NB and the HT Link, whose speeds can be changed not only by manipulating the system bus directly, but also by changing multipliers...
...which finally brings me to my question. i see people OCing their unlocked-multiplier CPUs using multipliers only (with regard to CPU frequency, CPU-NB frequency, and HT Link frequency), and very little or no OCing using the system bus. for instance, i see some folks OCing their 1090Ts to ~4GHz (and CPU-NBs & HT Links to ~2600MHz) using nothing but the CPU multiplier, CPU-NB multiplier, and HT Link multiplier, and leaving the system bus at the default 200MHz. is there a reason some of these folks aren't using slightly lower multipliers and a higher system bus speed? again, back in the day, not only was it necessary to OC the system bus in order to OC the CPU and memory, but it was also important b/c it gave your FSB a boost too.
the only reason for not OCing the system bus that would make sense to me is if today's HT Link is the modern-day equivalent to yesterday's FSB. if that were the case, i can see how HT Link can be OCed by multiplier alone. is this a misinterpretation? if it is, then i'm still not clear on why some folks are using just multipliers, and no system bus, to OC.
TIA,
Eric
we now live in a world of CPUs w/ unlocked multipliers (well not really, but a good number of CPUs today allow multiplier manipulation). i understand the benefit of having access to both the system bus and multipliers for OCing, but i'm on the fence about the importance of the system bus speed these days. back in the days of the Pentium 4, there were no IMCs (integrated memory controllers) or on-die north bridges (CPU-NBs). in other words, the FSB could not be changed using multipliers, and could only be changed by changing the system bus speed. these days we have the CPU-NB and the HT Link, whose speeds can be changed not only by manipulating the system bus directly, but also by changing multipliers...
...which finally brings me to my question. i see people OCing their unlocked-multiplier CPUs using multipliers only (with regard to CPU frequency, CPU-NB frequency, and HT Link frequency), and very little or no OCing using the system bus. for instance, i see some folks OCing their 1090Ts to ~4GHz (and CPU-NBs & HT Links to ~2600MHz) using nothing but the CPU multiplier, CPU-NB multiplier, and HT Link multiplier, and leaving the system bus at the default 200MHz. is there a reason some of these folks aren't using slightly lower multipliers and a higher system bus speed? again, back in the day, not only was it necessary to OC the system bus in order to OC the CPU and memory, but it was also important b/c it gave your FSB a boost too.
the only reason for not OCing the system bus that would make sense to me is if today's HT Link is the modern-day equivalent to yesterday's FSB. if that were the case, i can see how HT Link can be OCed by multiplier alone. is this a misinterpretation? if it is, then i'm still not clear on why some folks are using just multipliers, and no system bus, to OC.
TIA,
Eric
