Good i5/i7 Overclocking Guide?

dmw16

Diamond Member
Nov 12, 2000
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I am trying to find a good guide for overclocking the i5/i7. I haven't overclocked since the days when there were unlocking kits for Athlons.

I realize it's gotten more complex with the i7's and I was hoping someone could point me in the direction of a good guide.

Thanks.
 

Markfw

Moderator Emeritus, Elite Member
May 16, 2002
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If somebody here would make a really good one, like the others we have, I would sticky it !
 

MrK6

Diamond Member
Aug 9, 2004
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If somebody here would make a really good one, like the others we have, I would sticky it !
One of the projects I would like to undertake once my finals are over at the end of this week :), stay tuned!

For now, what's your system and what's unclear to you? I can't type up a full guide, but I did a ton of Googling when I was overclocking my i5 750 and it helped me immensely (see sig :D).
 

dmw16

Diamond Member
Nov 12, 2000
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One of the projects I would like to undertake once my finals are over at the end of this week :), stay tuned!

For now, what's your system and what's unclear to you? I can't type up a full guide, but I did a ton of Googling when I was overclocking my i5 750 and it helped me immensely (see sig :D).

Our systems are very similar. I have an i7 860, but otherwise it's almost the same as yours (even the same case). :)

I'll do some googling, there just seems like there is a lot more to it than there used to be.
 

MrK6

Diamond Member
Aug 9, 2004
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Our systems are very similar. I have an i7 860, but otherwise it's almost the same as yours (even the same case). :)

I'll do some googling, there just seems like there is a lot more to it than there used to be.
That makes this easier then. Basically I've found there's two ways to run my i5 750 (and I imagine the i7 860 is very similar) with a major focus - either efficiency or performance. That means, you can turn on all the power saving features and have it sip power, or you can turn them all off and crank performance, but unfortunately there doesn't seem to be a happy medium. I'm guessing you want to go with the performance, so without further adieu:

1) Flash your BIOS to the latest version (F5 if you're using the P55M-UD4)
2) Turn off all power saving features (in the MIB menu), including all the C-states and EIST, as I've found these really destabilize the hell out of the chip
3) Leave Turbo mode on, as it's the only way to select your highest multiplier (you want this multi to you can keep your BCLK low)
4) To overclock your CPU, raise the BCLK, frequency is BCLK x multiplier, usually BCLK up to 190 haven't seen many issues reported with, 190-200 you need more voltage, and 200+ usually requires more voltage than it's worth, but who knows, you might have a good chip.
5) Do the standard things like lock your PCIe frequency at 100MHz, etc.
6) Make sure you RAM is configured to run at its rated speed using the memory multiplier and its stock timings and voltage. You can work on overclocking your RAM as well, but do it later as it's difficult to keep track of what's holding you back if you incorporate too many variables.
7) Voltages - Intel specifies that you should not exceed 1.55V Vcore, 1.21V VTT/QPI, and 1.65V Vdimm, those are good guidelines to keep. Your cooling will most likely fail before you get to 1.55Vcore, but the VTT rating is much lower than on the socket 1366, and a lot of guides and review sites have exceeded this. It might not matter, but it also might be killing CPUs, who knows. The rest of the voltages like CPU PLL can stay at stock values. For reference, I'm running 1.35V Vcore, 1.21V VTT, 1.6V Vdimm, stock everything else. Vcore I've found stabilizes the CPU (duh) and also the PCIe component. Since being incorporated into these chips, it actually limits the performance, hence you need more Vcore than on socket 1366 i7's. VTT seems to stabilize higher BCLK values, and obviously Vdimm is for you RAM.
8) Hyperthreading is something else you'll have to consider, but I really can't help you on it because I have no experience with it on the socket 1156 platform. Generally, hyperthreading will make you run hotter and make it harder to overclock (more voltage/heat for a given speed). Up to you if you want to leave it on or not.
9) Stability testing - use memtest86+ for RAM, prime95/OCCT for CPU, and also try it out in some demanding games (GTAIV found some good weaknesses in my overclock).

That should get your started in the right direction, lemme know if you have more questions :).
 

boglwe

Senior member
Aug 16, 2007
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I would love to see something as simple as that for the I7 920, still great info, thanks
 

SniperWulf

Golden Member
Dec 11, 1999
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I have a similar setup as you guys and have pics of bios screens if you want em. LMK and I'll post up
 

Skott

Diamond Member
Oct 4, 2005
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I just upgraded my SFF SG03 case to a i5 750, GA P55M-UD2, 4GB GSkill RAM, WD 640GB hdd, and Corsair H50 CPU cooler so I'll be watching this thread as well. I just finished doing the initial 24hr Prime 95 burn in test and everything passed with flying colors so now I'm going to start playing around with some overclocking. Due to my mATX mobo and SFF case I don't expect to hit the high overclocks of the big ATX big boys but any OC tips will surely help me get as good as I can.