soccerballtux
Lifer
- Dec 30, 2004
- 12,553
- 2
- 76
Okay, if I want to go over 3.5GHZ I have to increas voltage right, is there any guide showing how much do I have to increase it or does anybody know or do I have to find out by myself?
go to 1.45v on the core to start with.
If you're using PhenomMSRTweaker it makes it easy to control the voltages and multiplers. You can bump them up one at a time while you're running Prime95 and usually it will fail before windows locks up, at which point you can either increase the voltage or decrease the multipliers.
Note that the voltage shown there is what the chip has default, not what it's currently set at in BIOS-- IE, if you've set the vcore to +0.1 in bios, then when you do +0.1v in PhenomMSRTweaker that's going to be +0.2 total.
Same with the CPU-NB voltage.
Also note that CPU-NB is different from "NB". You shouldn't need to overvolt the NB on the motherboard any-- just the CPU-NB.
Start by overclocking the cores to their max with a given voltage that keeps you at or below 63C. When you've got the cores to their max, you can start fiddling with the CPU-NB. This is a bit harder than the cores since you have to reboot to make frequency changes.
Even if you think you've got the cores to a stable frequency, downclock them back to stock speed for when you're testing the CPU-NB. Find a stable CPU-NB frequency (I was able to hit 2.6ghz @1.4v) by booting into windows and running your stability test app again, when you've got a stable cpu-nb clock your cores back up and test again-- higher core frequency will stress your CPU-NB [it's the 6MB L3 cache] more (you're pulling data from it faster) and it's not uncommon to need a slight voltage bump [when running with cores OC'd] above what it was stable at before [under stock core speeds]
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