Originally posted by: Spoelie
You have to change FID and DID under "AM2+ ratio adjust", leave DID on 0 and change FID to:
http://ocia.net/aimages/309_5_full.jpg
* DID = 1 would divide the resulting FID by 2
* I don't know if the bios accepts hexadecimal numbers, if not, then 0a in this graph would be equal to 10 in the bios and a 13x multiplier, 0b = 12 = 13.5x, etc.
* Some say the P07 bios has issues with cpu muliplier control, try P06 if P07 doesn't work
There's no direct voltage control, only a + box (first item under voltage settings).
If you type 1 in there you get 0.024 extra volts, 5 will net you 0.12 extra. These extra volts will get applied in any powerstate if you're using CnQ. 940 standard has 1.35v but this board overvolts to 1.375 by default. So to get 1.4 you need to just put 1 in the box.
Another (and imo better) option is to only set htt and northbridge clocks in bios, and let K10stat do the multiplier and voltage manipulation after boot. This way you can keep the P07 bios because P06 has other issues. Also keep in mind that K10stat doesn't take into account all voltage bios settings. 1.35v in the program corresponds to 1.375 real volts on the foxconn. If you put 1 in the + box in the bios, then 1.35v would correspond to 1.4 real volts on the board. If you put 1.3v in the program then you would get the actual 1.35v with aforementioned settings. Use cpu-z to keep an eye on it.
Remember that the northbridge multiplier (you can only change that one in the bios, no windows program) has the same system as the cpu multiplier but with a different scale!!
FID 6 equals 10x multi there, and every step up is a full multiplier step up (7 = 11x etc.). The 940 has a default NB-FID of 5.
Foxconn doesn't offer a DID part for the northbridge, it's fixed at 0. Foxconn also doesn't offer a CPU-NB voltage control but luckily K10stat provides that.
And leave ACC off on phenom 2
Another tip: try a cold boot when changing any of above mentioned settings. I learned the hard way that my PII920 (non-BE) its CPU-NB multiplier could only be changed on reboot, but any setting other than default would hard-lock before posting on cold-boot, necessitating a cmos clear every time. I'm assuming it's because the PII920 doesn't allow NB multi manipulation, but it could be the board as well.. (I should have gotten the PII940

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