I wanted to know how to overclock my p4 2.26GHz cpu to like 2.4GHz without any additional cooling in my computer. :helpsmile:
I wanted to know how to overclock my p4 2.26GHz cpu to like 2.4GHz without any additional cooling in my computer. :helpsmile:
I saw it but it doesnt describe how to overclock pentium4s. It says to ask the members with teh p4s.Originally posted by peerzyboy@4 August 2004 - 15:52
Check the HardWare guides thread thats pinned, second post.
First of all you need a mobo capable of supporting overclocking.
So if you can provide that info we've got somewhere to start. And it would bu useful to know what cooling you've got at the moment, but current temps will probably suffice if you don't know what's inside your pc.
Other than that the principles are the same. The multipliers are locked on P4 chips, but that is now the same on most Athlon XP+ chips, so the only choice is to change the base frequency.
But 2.26GHz to 2.4GHz is not a very big jump, it is doubtful if you would notice the difference except in artificial benchmarks. You need to be looking at an increase in performance of about 20% for it to be really worthwhile (2.7GHz in your case), but as you obviously know that could raise temps more than is healthy. The only way to find out is to try it.
.Political correctness is based on the principle that it's possible to pick up a turd by the clean end.
ok I'm gonna sneakily jump in here as I too am looking at oc'n for the first time.
I am in the process of reading through peerzyboy's guide.
My system is
P4 2.6 cpu stock intel cooling
thermaltake xaser III case with all the seven fans running full tilt, and the side off at the mo
abit ic7 max 3 mobo
1 Gb corsair pc 4000 ram
radeon 9600 pro gfx 400/300 @ 530/305 (this is the only current oc, did it yesterday)
temps at the mo
case 30 degrees celcius, cpu 39, pwn (whatever that is) 33, gfx 36
any guidance would be much appreciated
oh the cpu is a northwood ht cpu
My compuetr here. All it says for my mobo is Intel full ATX motherboard. The only two fans I see in my computer are the heatsink for my cpu, abd the fan on my graphics card. I just wanted a couple hundred megahertz because I dident want my computer to heat up too much, as I have no real cooling.
OCin with pre-built comps is usually harder since you prolly have a mobo that doesnt really support it.......
open your comp up and see if you can find any model numbers on it, and check the manuals for info, were especially looking for:
mobo brand, model and chipset
CPU model (got that)
and if possible RAM type
@ Zero Cool: hijacking is bad!!!!
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I opened up my computer and the mobo says: Intel Desktop Board D845EBT. Chipset? How do I find that out?Originally posted by Storm@4 August 2004 - 18:52
OCin with pre-built comps is usually harder since you prolly have a mobo that doesnt really support it.......
open your comp up and see if you can find any model numbers on it, and check the manuals for info, were especially looking for:
mobo brand, model and chipset
CPU model (got that)
and if possible RAM type
@ Zero Cool: hijacking is bad!!!!
Why not do this the easy way?
Reboot your machine and enter BIOS...see what options you have available.
"I am the one who knocks."- Heisenberg
I saw something about Chipset Memory Timing Control but that was it. Is that what I wan't?Originally posted by clocker@4 August 2004 - 19:39
Why not do this the easy way?
Reboot your machine and enter BIOS...see what options you have available.
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