I have never overclocked before. I am buildign a new system, and as it turns out, the chip and the motherboard are well suited for overclocking, and the motherboard itself may be able to overclock the FSB as well.
I want to optimize performance of a RAW image editing application, Nikon Capture NX2. Seems the bottleneck in the application is the FSB. The software is reliant on the CPU for editing, and I was told in some dual core systems, the cpu's are less than half load.
What issues would I need to catch up on to overclocking the FSB. I imagine that would also require overclocking the CPU and memory? Would I need any of the cooling items for the RAM?
Right now, I plan on using the following for a budget system, I haven't decided on memory. The CPU is a 800 FSB (and the motherboard is also 800 even though newegg does not list it as so). Moving up to a 1066 FSB is another $50, put maybe I can safely overclock it faster.
GIGABYTE GA-G31M-ES2L
Intel e5200
I want to optimize performance of a RAW image editing application, Nikon Capture NX2. Seems the bottleneck in the application is the FSB. The software is reliant on the CPU for editing, and I was told in some dual core systems, the cpu's are less than half load.
What issues would I need to catch up on to overclocking the FSB. I imagine that would also require overclocking the CPU and memory? Would I need any of the cooling items for the RAM?
Right now, I plan on using the following for a budget system, I haven't decided on memory. The CPU is a 800 FSB (and the motherboard is also 800 even though newegg does not list it as so). Moving up to a 1066 FSB is another $50, put maybe I can safely overclock it faster.
GIGABYTE GA-G31M-ES2L
Intel e5200
