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jonathan_tijuana
08-13-2003, 08:39 AM
the maximum speed for my processor is 3000MHZ but the always is on 2166MHZ. what can i do to get more speed (3000MHZ)?

Enigma2003
08-13-2003, 09:06 AM
i dont understand what you mean, you need to be more specific.

You've bought 2.2Ghz chip and want it to go faster?
You think your chip can run at 3Ghz?
Is it made by AMD ot Intel?
What motherboard do you have?

if you tell me these then i can help you

Keikan
08-13-2003, 09:09 AM
Maybe all the speed your using is 2.1ghz?

Enigma2003
08-13-2003, 09:13 AM
Keikan, how can that make sense.

A processor speed is set, if its been set to 2.2Ghz then it will run at 2.2 same as if you bought a 2.8Ghz Processor then it would run at 2.8 UNLESS it was overclocked OR underclocked.

Keikan
08-13-2003, 09:16 AM
Myabe he wants to overclock that sucka

jonathan_tijuana
08-13-2003, 09:23 AM
sorry i'm wrong, ;) i have amd 2700+ it's ok if is running at 2166 MHZ?

Enigma2003
08-13-2003, 09:43 AM
thats fine JT, your chip should be running at that speed. unless of course you would like to make it faster by overclocking it.

jonathan_tijuana
08-13-2003, 10:52 AM
how do i overclock it?

Enigma2003
08-13-2003, 11:07 AM
Whats your motherboard?

if you want a guide to overclocking then go to google and do as search for AMD overclocking. you'll soon get the idea.

jonathan_tijuana
08-13-2003, 11:09 AM
i have asus A7N8X Deluxe

Skank
08-13-2003, 11:22 AM
just go into the bios and turn up the voltage settings one notch at a time, if anything fails just revert back to the default settins, i did this on a pentium 4 1600, first notch i was able to go up to was 2300..your probably gonna need a better heat sink and fan if your running AMD, they arent reknown for putting good ones in straight off the show room floor

Enigma2003
08-13-2003, 12:07 PM
not necessarily. when you increase the voltage to the ship, you increase the heat. the main thing in overclocking it keeping the heat down. this is the problem, otherwise overclocking would be so, so easy.

you will need to increase the front side bus (fsb) and the mutiplier in the bios. if the system becomes unstable then you can put the voltage up to increase stability. With an ordinairy heatsink and fan cooling, you dont wanna push the voltage up too much as this is what increases the heat.

three things you can do:
increase fsb (increases the speed)
increase multiplier (increases the speed)
increase voltage (increases stability and heat)

the idea is to get asmuch speed as you can whilst keeping stability high and heat low. Your chip temp shouldnt really be going over 50 degrees C.
Also if your comp isn't new, then check the heatsink for dust. cleaning it can lower your temp about 5 degrees.

its all a compromise between stability and speed.

Again, go on google and find a better guide, but this is what you need to do.

Damnatory
08-14-2003, 06:07 AM
Originally posted by Enigma2003@13 August 2003 - 13:07
the idea is to get asmuch speed as you can whilst keeping stability high and heat low. Your chip temp shouldnt really be going over 50 degrees C.

I forget the formula for Celsius to Fahrenheit, but roughly, 50 celsius is like 130 Fahrenheit right? I use ASUS PC Probe to monitor my temp. It's normally at 36 C / 96 F, Though I thought it was running to hot, but I wasn't sure.

3rd gen noob
08-14-2003, 06:12 AM
Originally posted by Damnatory@14 August 2003 - 07:07
I forget the formula for Celsius to Fahrenheit
to go from celsius to farenheight, multiply the degrees c by 1.8, then add 32 to the answer, thus

f = (1.8c)+32

also, you don't necessarily have to increase voltage when overclocking
i overclocked from 2.17 to 2.22 GHz (basically going from a 2700 to 2800), with no problems at all on stock cooling

also, a 2700 should be more than enough for your needs anyway, why would you want more?

theprisoner
08-14-2003, 09:09 PM
Overclocking is far more dangerous for what its worth, the computer runs very very hot and wares out faster for a little difference..

Enigma2003
08-14-2003, 09:46 PM
I forget the formula for Celsius to Fahrenheit, but roughly, 50 celsius is like 130 Fahrenheit right? I use ASUS PC Probe to monitor my temp. It's normally at 36 C / 96 F, Though I thought it was running to hot, but I wasn't sure.

36 is very fine, you dont have to worry at all with that temp.



also, you don't necessarily have to increase voltage when overclocking
i overclocked from 2.17 to 2.22 GHz (basically going from a 2700 to 2800), with no problems at all on stock cooling

with that size of an overclock, you shouldnt need to increase the voltage. There you're only increasing by 0.05Ghz (50MHz). that is not a very large overclock.

if you want to actually overclock and feel a difference then you will need to increase the voltage. For example i have 2.4GHz P4 running at a comfortable 2.73GHz. normally my machine (not overclocked) will run at 41.4 degrees, when i overclock it reaches a maximum of 47.5 degrees which is absolutely fine. this does no harm.

50 degrees is perfect.
60 degrees is a temp you def. should not exceed.
70 degrees is just dangerous.

_John_Lennon_
08-15-2003, 02:44 AM
Im usually running at anywhere from 47-58, but my 2500 is overclocked with it, but I neednt worry, if it dies, I just send it back in, Heh.

Serious, Overclocking is always worth it, because you always have SOME head room, and your getting more worth out of your processor, beause its running faster than the amount you paid for.

Enigma2003
08-15-2003, 09:23 AM
JL is right. Almost every chip can get some speed out of it with absolutely no hassle. In fact it is not uncommon for Intel to say take a 2.6GHz P4 and set it down to 2.4GHz simply because demand is high.

if you get one of these chips then you are in luck and it is very easy to overclock.

Miyake
08-15-2003, 12:22 PM
i have a p4 1.4 on a microstar ms 6385. it has no jumpers and no bios setting. thers a cpu muliplyer. its set at 8 which is the safe setting, it can only go up to 24, i set it to the pre said number and it did fuck all