Originally posted by: SickBeast
See how high it will clock on stock volts, then juice it and see what it will do maxed out. Use a decent air cooler like the Xigmatek.
Originally posted by: apoppin
Originally posted by: SickBeast
See how high it will clock on stock volts, then juice it and see what it will do maxed out. Use a decent air cooler like the Xigmatek.
i have the brand new Cooler Master Hyper n212 coming tomorrow. it is reported to be a decent cooler.
i should do all of this testing and max O/C'ing with X2 - long before i attempt to Unlock it, right?
Originally posted by: lopri
I mean, if it's something 100% legit and safe, I'd think AMD could figure out a way to make it as default in BIOS codes without allowing 'over-coring' for X2's and X3's? Leaving it as 'optional' gives me an impression that there is something AMD is hiding when it comes to ACC.
Originally posted by: lopri
EC Firmware (ACC in Gigabyte's wording)
Before EC Firmware
After EC Firmware
Everest runs vary quite a bit, but not by this much, and not as consistently. I tried to pick average values (ignore the memory latency in 'before' shot since that's an outlier).
One thing that stuck out most (which made me notice it) is the memory read. Before ACC, memory read always trailed L3 read by a few hundread MB/s, depending on memory and NB frequency. After ACC, I now observe memory read almost equaling L3 read and sometimes exceeding by a hair. This indicates to me that memory subsystem is more efficient by enabling ACC. Memory copy is increased by whooping 1000 MB/s.
I ran a few other benches and noticed small-to-tiny but meaningful performance increase as well.
Microprocessors are designed to operate in even the most extreme of conditions, AMD seemed to imply that its ability to adjust the ACC value somehow changes this. Curiously enough, AMD cited "competitive concerns" as a reason why it would not disclose exactly what's going on with this new overclocking feature. We can't help but wonder if it is because AMD is going a little too far in the sacrifices it's willing to make in the quest for higher clock speeds.
Unlike the original Pheno's which benefited from a negative two to six percent ACC, Sami explained that with 45nm Phenom IIs it can be used to boost "weaker" CPU cores to higher speeds by using positive ACC. If there is one (or several), applying two percent ACC to that core(s), while leaving the rest at zero percent can eke out a few extra MHz. However he was also keen to point out it may or may not provide additional MHz over leaving ACC disabled - it's entirely down to the quality of the CPU and its synergy with the motherboard and BIOS.
I have not encountered a single account on how ACC works and am dying to know what the heck it does and how.
Originally posted by: soccerballtux
Goes up where?
Originally posted by: apoppin
http://www.newegg.com/Product/...x?Item=N82E16819103680
AMD Phenom II X2 550 Black Edition Callisto 3.1GHz 2 x 512KB L2 Cache 6MB L3 Cache Socket AM3 80W Dual-Core Processor - Retail
Your Price: $97.99
With Promo Code
EMCLTNS24
damn .. maybe i should call NewEgg and try to get an adjustment
NOW it goes on sale
- still free shipping in case anyone else wants to jump on a cheap quad core for under $100
{maybe}
Originally posted by: Stoneburner
That takes it below $100 which means the bill me later promo should not apply unless you add an item.
Assuming people can get this from 80 to 100 dollars, and possibly get a quad core deneb at 3.5 ghz or higher... what a steal.
Originally posted by: Stoneburner
Originally posted by: apoppin
http://www.newegg.com/Product/...x?Item=N82E16819103680
AMD Phenom II X2 550 Black Edition Callisto 3.1GHz 2 x 512KB L2 Cache 6MB L3 Cache Socket AM3 80W Dual-Core Processor - Retail
Your Price: $97.99
With Promo Code
EMCLTNS24
damn .. maybe i should call NewEgg and try to get an adjustment
NOW it goes on sale
- still free shipping in case anyone else wants to jump on a cheap quad core for under $100
{maybe}
That takes it below $100 which means the bill me later promo should not apply unless you add an item.
Assuming people can get this from 80 to 100 dollars, and possibly get a quad core deneb at 3.5 ghz or higher... what a steal.
Originally posted by: richierich1212
apoppin quit lagging and show some damn screenshots already
Enter Promo Code* :"Take 10% off all Motherboards"
- 72 hours only!! - NewEgg.com
Originally posted by: Sylvanas
XS has a listed of CPU batches and whether they have had success on each motherboard here. You may want to compare this to what batch your 550 is when it arrives.
[ 0915FPMW ]
0915FPMW - __adil__ - Gigabyte MA790FXT UD5P - F3K - Fail - Link
0915FPMW - Cele303 - DFI 790FXB-M2RSH - 2901 - Fail - Link
0915FPMW - Cele303 - Asrock AOD790GX/128M - P1.50 - Fail - Link
So can the thing unlock to 4 cores?
