Originally posted by: Zebo
I run torture test. The documentation says thats most demanding.
Originally posted by: ectx
Here is my experience:
1700xp oc to 2300mhz 11.5 x200 at 1.7v. (It was at higher speed but I used a lower speed fan to reduce noize). I thought it was 100% stable in older version of prim95 tests. But since I started using new prime95 in my other pc's, I start to have some doubt: here is my tests over a few weeks:
a. small fft - no error in 36 hrs.
b. in place large fft - no error in 36hrs.
c. blended - error out in 12- 14hrs.
d. custom - large fft (2048K and above) - errors out in ~ 10 hrs.
I have reprpeated the cycle of tests 2 test and the results are largely reproducable.
My guess is that most problem occurs in L-2 cache or in the pipelines from chip to cache to memory (the memory sticks have been proved to run at much higher fsb so it is not the problem of the memory sticks). So running larger FFT tests will detect the problems sooner. If you really oc the chip excessivley, I bet any of the torture tests will error out in a few min. When your chip is almost stable, I'd recommend the large fft custom test.
Maybe I should try to force the min fft to 4096 and see if it forces errors even quicker.
Also, I have tried the tests on p4, barton and observed that large fft custom tests find errors sooner.
Also, you are advised to at least try a 3-D test. I have systems that is stable in >10 hr in prime95 (it would ultimately error out in prime 95 but takes much longer) but could not run 3dmark2003 for > 5 min. I also have systems running 3d all day long but have problem with prime95 in a few hours. In general, I guess 3dmk detects NB problems.
Anyway, it is a frustrating process and you should try a few different tests as the preliminary tests. As you get close to the stable speed, I beleive there is no better tests other than running prime95. But I could be wrong.
That and the fact that many of the newest, fastest video cards use in excess of 100 watts of power. If that happened to be power that your cpu needed, then you've also got a problem.Originally posted by: MercenaryForHire
Originally posted by: ectx
Here is my experience:
1700xp oc to 2300mhz 11.5 x200 at 1.7v. (It was at higher speed but I used a lower speed fan to reduce noize). I thought it was 100% stable in older version of prim95 tests. But since I started using new prime95 in my other pc's, I start to have some doubt: here is my tests over a few weeks:
a. small fft - no error in 36 hrs.
b. in place large fft - no error in 36hrs.
c. blended - error out in 12- 14hrs.
d. custom - large fft (2048K and above) - errors out in ~ 10 hrs.
I have reprpeated the cycle of tests 2 test and the results are largely reproducable.
My guess is that most problem occurs in L-2 cache or in the pipelines from chip to cache to memory (the memory sticks have been proved to run at much higher fsb so it is not the problem of the memory sticks). So running larger FFT tests will detect the problems sooner. If you really oc the chip excessivley, I bet any of the torture tests will error out in a few min. When your chip is almost stable, I'd recommend the large fft custom test.
Maybe I should try to force the min fft to 4096 and see if it forces errors even quicker.
Also, I have tried the tests on p4, barton and observed that large fft custom tests find errors sooner.
Also, you are advised to at least try a 3-D test. I have systems that is stable in >10 hr in prime95 (it would ultimately error out in prime 95 but takes much longer) but could not run 3dmark2003 for > 5 min. I also have systems running 3d all day long but have problem with prime95 in a few hours. In general, I guess 3dmk detects NB problems.
Anyway, it is a frustrating process and you should try a few different tests as the preliminary tests. As you get close to the stable speed, I beleive there is no better tests other than running prime95. But I could be wrong.
You also have to consider that big-power 3D cards can drastically affect stability by being both the source of heat or the component that fails to it.
- M4H