- Sep 28, 2001
- 8,464
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This could be seen as a "Mini FAQ" which i see the need to write after i did quite soem research. My findings are not only based on my own observations, but also based on statements by the programmers of various stress testing programs.
Of course we know all the programs around, be it OCCT, Prime95, Wprime, Orthos, Memtest etc.
What many people probably dont know is that none of those programs cant be used alone to make a solid statement about a "stable" system.
In fact, some programs are far superior finding errors/instability for certain components of your overclocked PC (eg. CPU, Ram, Northbridge, FSB) - and you NEED a combination of tools and run the appropriate tests targeting only this ONE hardware component: NONE of the tools is an allround stability tester. Using ONE tool testing for CPU, Memory, Northbridge, FSB stability is a big mistake!
Ok, let's start:
1) CPU:
The *currently* best and most sensitive test for CPU stability is using the latest multithreaded Prime95 http://mersenne.org/gimps/p64v256.zip
if you only use it at the "small FFT" setting, solely for testing the CPU.
This is indeed a fact, resulting in even other tools like OCCT http://www.ocbase.com now rewriting their CPU stress code to adapt to the new Prime95 code. Nothing beats Prime95 when it comes to test your CPU stability.
2) MEMORY:
The king of memory testing is without a doubt memtest *for windows* http://hcidesign.com/memtest/
There is no other tool which finds memory errors as quick as memtest for windows. (Try it for yourself, use various tools and compare.)
Many, many people use a bootable memtest86+ CD http://www.memtest.org/ for getting an impression of memory stability without the need to boot into an OS. There are also some BIOS with memtest "built in". All those Memtest86+ versions are the "DOS" versions of memtest. The bootable dos/memtest version is a good first indicator for checking whether your memory is defective - but it is a very far way from memtest86+ stability in DOS to "real life" memory stability under Vista or XP! I had situations where memtest 2.0 from DOS/CD passes test #5 for 30 mins, but i wasnt even able to boot into windows! Ever since i recommend this only for "a first glance" for checking your memory - but the real testing has to be done in the OS!
3) NORTHBRIDGE, VMEM Voltage and Ram Timings
OCCT http://www.ocbase.com in "Ram" testing mode is the best in testing VMEM voltage, memory timings or low Northbridge Voltage!
Combine the above programs: P95 for CPU - OCCT/Ram for FSB, timings, NB - Memtest/Windows for overall ram-integrity. Only if you pass all those tests you can be halfway sure that your system is actually stable.
For a VERY sloppy, first "impression" test, you can also use OCCT in "CPU/Ram" modus and let it run 60mins - this might be sufficient if time is short. But be adviced that it cannot replace testing with the above tools and targeting each component with the tool which does the best job.
georg.
Add: 3/20
The new version OCCT 2.0.0a/b changed its code now for CPU testing. CPU testing using OCCT now uses the same, sensitive code as Prime95 using small FFTs. This is, as of now, the most sensitive code fo testing your CPU.
Oberservations show that in OCCT2.0.0 the *MEM* testing seems to have improved also - but i think that a memtest (windows) might still be advised also.
Of course we know all the programs around, be it OCCT, Prime95, Wprime, Orthos, Memtest etc.
What many people probably dont know is that none of those programs cant be used alone to make a solid statement about a "stable" system.
In fact, some programs are far superior finding errors/instability for certain components of your overclocked PC (eg. CPU, Ram, Northbridge, FSB) - and you NEED a combination of tools and run the appropriate tests targeting only this ONE hardware component: NONE of the tools is an allround stability tester. Using ONE tool testing for CPU, Memory, Northbridge, FSB stability is a big mistake!
Ok, let's start:
1) CPU:
The *currently* best and most sensitive test for CPU stability is using the latest multithreaded Prime95 http://mersenne.org/gimps/p64v256.zip
if you only use it at the "small FFT" setting, solely for testing the CPU.
This is indeed a fact, resulting in even other tools like OCCT http://www.ocbase.com now rewriting their CPU stress code to adapt to the new Prime95 code. Nothing beats Prime95 when it comes to test your CPU stability.
2) MEMORY:
The king of memory testing is without a doubt memtest *for windows* http://hcidesign.com/memtest/
There is no other tool which finds memory errors as quick as memtest for windows. (Try it for yourself, use various tools and compare.)
Many, many people use a bootable memtest86+ CD http://www.memtest.org/ for getting an impression of memory stability without the need to boot into an OS. There are also some BIOS with memtest "built in". All those Memtest86+ versions are the "DOS" versions of memtest. The bootable dos/memtest version is a good first indicator for checking whether your memory is defective - but it is a very far way from memtest86+ stability in DOS to "real life" memory stability under Vista or XP! I had situations where memtest 2.0 from DOS/CD passes test #5 for 30 mins, but i wasnt even able to boot into windows! Ever since i recommend this only for "a first glance" for checking your memory - but the real testing has to be done in the OS!
3) NORTHBRIDGE, VMEM Voltage and Ram Timings
OCCT http://www.ocbase.com in "Ram" testing mode is the best in testing VMEM voltage, memory timings or low Northbridge Voltage!
Combine the above programs: P95 for CPU - OCCT/Ram for FSB, timings, NB - Memtest/Windows for overall ram-integrity. Only if you pass all those tests you can be halfway sure that your system is actually stable.
For a VERY sloppy, first "impression" test, you can also use OCCT in "CPU/Ram" modus and let it run 60mins - this might be sufficient if time is short. But be adviced that it cannot replace testing with the above tools and targeting each component with the tool which does the best job.
georg.
Add: 3/20
The new version OCCT 2.0.0a/b changed its code now for CPU testing. CPU testing using OCCT now uses the same, sensitive code as Prime95 using small FFTs. This is, as of now, the most sensitive code fo testing your CPU.
Oberservations show that in OCCT2.0.0 the *MEM* testing seems to have improved also - but i think that a memtest (windows) might still be advised also.