Originally posted by: AstroGuardian
Originally posted by: AstroGuardian
the situation is like this.
When some components have a working frequency like CPU, PCI-E clock generator, GPU etc, the cause electricity to be induced in surrounding metal parts.
This means that sometimes the magnetic field which these components generate, can interfere and cause problems with surrounding components.
Spread spectrum kinda neutralizes these interferences and obtains stable operartion.
However this kind of situations are very rare (unless your computer is placed unprotected near the North or South poles where this megnetic field is generated by the Earth itself) and the spread spectrum should be disabled. I even think that is scarifies a little performance. BUT, if you overclock than all spread spectrums MUST be DISABLED.
I am not a professional in these things and i hope i said this the right way. Correct me but the point is OK.
Not really.
Here's the deal - the FCC certifies all preassembled PCs (Dell, HP, etc) under 'regulatory' testing. Such regulatory testing requires that the pc, as a box, emits radiation below a certain intensity threshold. Spread spectrum is used to reduce the peak emission at 2.485 GHz, which is I believe the center frequency for PCI-E clock operation operation, and spread it over a range of frequencies, centered about 2.485, such that the median frequently is still 2.485 but might vary from 2.475 to 2.495 (for example - these figures aren't accurate).
From an engineering point of view, a non-spread clock is a point (delta) function. Spread spectrum takes the energy and puts it into a rectangle, centered about a frequency, with some arbitrary bandwidth. The amount of energy contained (the integral) is the same (spreading doesn't reduce the amount of radiation, just reduces the peak) and regulatory testing is passable.
Also,
the PCI-E clock (which is what you're spreading) can have some unfortunate conflicts with ISM band equipment, such as European 802.11g adapters, where channel 13 can sometimes fall within the clock spread, and channel 14 (only in Japan) that does fall within the spread clock - the pci-e clock can emit radiation that couples within the laptop's antenna connectors, reducing the signal/noise ratio of channel 14 communications, significantly limiting your range.
<-- not a PCI-E PHY designer, but works with them frequently