Originally posted by: Concillian
To some extent I agree with the OP.
A serious challenge to overclockers:
- Un-overclock your processor for a week
- Play games as usual for three days or so (at the same settings you used before)
- Benchmark the games you play (at the same settings you used before)
Post up your results.
I have a 2800+ that overclocks in the 2350 range. I played for a week at 1800 MHz and this is what I found:
WoW -- No noticeable difference, FPS didn't appear to change, but I didn't use FRAPS
Battlefield: Vietnam -- No noticeable difference. FRAPS of a loop I use to benchmark showed ZERO difference in average and minimum FPS
UT2004 -- No noticeable difference. Benchmark showed ZERO difference in FPS between the two speeds.
Subjectively and objectively I couldn't tell a difference while gaming. This with a well overclocked x800pro, and I was running 1280 x 1024 with AA/AF enabled in UT and BFV, 1600 x 1200 only AF enabled in WoW.
Sure I can tell the difference when running specific benchmarks like benching games at 640x480 or SuperPi and the like, but don't fool yourself into thinking your gaming performance is actually getting better with a faster CPU. I have been an overclocker since 486 days. It's fun to find the limits, and I will continue to do so. But for everyday use, I back things off and run lower voltage to save on my utilities bill (I have 3 computers that are on 24/7 every little bit helps)
I disagree somewhat with the viewpoint of why OC, as there are cases where more CPU power is a good thing, I simply advocate thinking about how you actually benefit from OC'ing. I did that, and in my case I discovered that I wasn't getting any noticeable performance increase.