Overclocking

ajfletcher

Member
May 11, 2005
52
0
0
I had a P4 3.0 GHz overclocked to only 3.6. It died a month later. What is your highest overclocking and was it stable?
 

Shawn

Lifer
Apr 20, 2003
32,236
53
91
I had a P4 1.6 @ 2.4GHz for 2 years. Upgraded to a 3.02GHz reciently.
 

CycloWizard

Lifer
Sep 10, 2001
12,348
1
81
P4 1.6 GHz --> 2.4 GHz. Stock cooling and it hasn't crashed since the day I built it about three years ago.
 

Hossenfeffer

Diamond Member
Jul 16, 2000
7,462
1
0
I overclocked a Pentium III-450 and a Duron 600 to see what all they would do, then realized that about the last thing I need to be doing is overclocking my machine. Expensive habit with little to gain out of the whole thing.
 

sniperruff

Lifer
Apr 17, 2002
11,644
2
0
Originally posted by: ajfletcher
I had a P4 3.0 GHz overclocked to only 3.6. It died a month later. What is your highest overclocking and was it stable?

so if you can OC the chip to 5ghz on air and it'd last a week, would you do it?
 

MustangSVT

Lifer
Oct 7, 2000
11,554
12
81
highest?

percentage wise or just speed?

celly 300 @ 450

celly 633 @ 950

XP 1600+ @ 2100+ (1.74ghz)

and now... NC 3200+ A64 @ 2.73 ghz :p
 

SVT Cobra

Lifer
Mar 29, 2005
13,264
2
0
see rig below.....runbs perfectly stable no problem, i got it up to 3.2 and it posted fine but it would not run sandra or 3dmark....
 

Viper GTS

Lifer
Oct 13, 1999
38,107
433
136
Had a Celeron 566 @ 952 the week the FC Celerons were released.

Haven't done a whole lot since then, nothing in that percentage range.

Viper GTS
 

QuitBanningMe

Banned
Mar 2, 2005
5,038
2
0
Originally posted by: sniperruff
Originally posted by: ajfletcher
no way dude. But if it was free, heck yes!

yours only lasted 3 more weeks...

don't OC

[/thread]

I guess mine is still going. I ran it @3.6 at 1.575V for a few months and sold it to another forum member after I got bored with PCs.
 

cirthix

Diamond Member
Aug 28, 2004
3,616
1
76
overclocking is safe and is a good thing IF AND ONLY IF you overclock PROPERLY and know what you are doing. take it easy, raise voltages and stuff carefully, not haphazardly, keep an eye on temps at all times, if the system is unstable ,clock it down. if done right, oc'd hardware should have the same failure rate as non oc'd hardware