Originally posted by: lopri
Just logged back on to report back. Oh thank you much and no worries there, soonerproud. Trust me I was all ready to participate in the debate. I just happened to get busy so I just missed the right timing. We all have opinions about AMD vs. Intel, ATI vs. NV, Apple vs. Microsoft,.. the list goes on and on.
Back to the 955BE. This chip is really an interesting chip. Frustrating, yet rewarding. I have had this chip now only for 2 days, but one thing I can say for certain is that my Gigabyte board is not ready for prime time overclocking 955BE. It is an excellent board and I made sure everything works right (including SB750's RAID/AHCI) using X2 4050e, but its BIOS is not tuned well for AM3 just yet. (I suspect most AM2/AM2+ boards would be similar, particularly with 955BE)
I see this through the parameters (NB/memory/HT) changing when I leave things @Auto, and apparently Gigabyte didn't spend much time on the base code as it could. Going further, I'm thinking that even the base code from AMD probably is far from being polished.
There must be some sort of 'hook' (like 'straps' in Intel chipsets) as the CPU/NB multiplier and HTT change, and it looks to be that's what makes it so difficult to break 4.0GHz even though 3.8~3.9GHz can be achieved by near-stock voltage.
I thought about trying it on 32-bit OS, but because I have no plan to use this CPU in a 32-bit environment, I decided not to waste time. It's kinda disappointing, however, that this chip is not clocking as well it does in 32-bit, considering AMD pioneered 64-bit in the x86 world.
In the meantime, I have an interesting question for all. (Take a guess before you click on the answer)
What is the most difficult stress test for 955BE, when overclocked?
Answer