- Jul 27, 2002
- 13,312
- 687
- 126
FACT 1: For a successful overclocking, one of the most important factors is a stable voltage for the CPU.
FACT 2: You will never find a board with such a thing. Mobo manufacturers don't take kindly to such obscenity.
A typical scenario with a typical enthusiast motherboard regarding Vcore goes like:
I've heard various rumors including a conspiracy theory with this matter, but now I want a legitimate answer. Why can't they get it right? Many boards DO get other voltages right. And on many occasions they actually overvolt things. EXCEPT THE CPU. I'm getting tired of Vdrop, Vdroop, Vcore fluctuation and want to know what is really going on.
If anyone has a piece of knowledge, please chime in!
FACT 2: You will never find a board with such a thing. Mobo manufacturers don't take kindly to such obscenity.
A typical scenario with a typical enthusiast motherboard regarding Vcore goes like:
- 1. A user select a Vcore in the BIOS.
2. Upon POST, the board feels the user's greediness and gives 0.05V less Vcore.
3. Entering Windows, the board misses the target by ~0.02V but it knows the user will just deal with it.
4. Once the user load the CPU, the alerted board goes into a power-saving mode and cut additional 0.04V.
5. From there, the Vcore starts dancing up and down.
I've heard various rumors including a conspiracy theory with this matter, but now I want a legitimate answer. Why can't they get it right? Many boards DO get other voltages right. And on many occasions they actually overvolt things. EXCEPT THE CPU. I'm getting tired of Vdrop, Vdroop, Vcore fluctuation and want to know what is really going on.
If anyone has a piece of knowledge, please chime in!