Originally posted by: Burrich
Originally posted by: rizorith
I have 2gbx2 g.skill ddr2-1000 pc8000 memory and i'm trying to overclock a e8400 on a gigabyte p35-ds3l motherboard. tuniq tower for cooling.
Even with the vcore up to 1.3 i can't go over 3.6ghz.
I tried pulling one of the sticks out and left the other in slot 1 and I can run prime for 15 mins. Adding the second stick to slot 3 and i can't even post. I tried swapping sticks and same thing. So I tried putting 1 stick in slot 2 and nothing in any other slots and its fine - 15 mins in prime. But if I put just 1 stick in slot 3 or 4 windows won't post. Does this mean that those slots aren't working right or is it normal for slots 3 & 4 to be pickier?
I've got the DS3L, I've got the 8400, and I have/had bad RAM. I tried to OC and stability tested with Orthos, and it would consistently fail from anywhere from a few seconds to an hour. I ran memtest and it failed immediately. I took out one stick, ran again, failed immediately. Swapped sticks and was able to run for over an hour (which is roughly the length it takes to go through all tests) and didn't have an error. 1 bad stick of RAM, but have to return both because they're matched pair.
To run Memtest, Google,download, and burn Ultimate Boot CD. When you boot from it, go to motherboard utils, memory programs, then run Memtest86+. Let that run. If you get an error, either your RAM is undervolted or it's bad. Most likely it's bad and you'll need to RMA it. Try swapping around until you don't get errors.
If your memory is fine, then it's your voltages during your OC.
The DS3L has a terrible vdroop and you can't go by the +voltage numbers. As of this moment I do not recommend someone to buy this board for overclocking for this reason. It's a very misleading board and frankly not easy to OC with - I personally hate +voltage numbers (i.e. +.1 on DDR). I've had to do +0.5 on my RAM just to get it up to about 2.05V. This should illustrate the horrible vdroop across this board.
What you need to do is adjust the voltage, then use a program like Speedfan to check the voltages. You will most likely need to set the board to something like 1.4V to accommodate for the vdroop before you'll be able to OC like you wish. I know some people don't like using software to measure voltage, but without a multimeter it's your best bet.
There IS a place in the BIOS to check voltages, it's under PC Health.