O.K. That means I will have to set the Vcore manually so the DVID will be grayed out (isn't active).
What do ya think how much VCore am I supposed to fire on? 1.31V is enough for 4.6 GHz.
O.K. That means I will have to set the Vcore manually so the DVID will be grayed out (isn't active).
What do ya think how much VCore am I supposed to fire on? 1.31V is enough for 4.6 GHz.
my new memory world record lmao. trying an intel board for the first time, something seems a little off.
yeah, but i was just getting started, new record
^^ I wanted to build a 24/7 rig. Need to start using a seperate rig for benching, and this was the only x79 board the local shop had. After a bios flash memory still reads wrong in cpuz, but everything else seems to be working fine.
After a couple days playing with it, I actually like the board, even for over clocking. It does 5ghz on less vcore than the R4E, I was half tempted to put the R4E in the 24/7 and use this for benching, but I havent been able to clock quite as high with it yet.
How much voltage (Vcc) did ya need for 5 Ghz?
On the Intel board with 1.465v set in bios, it loaded out at 1.41v with LLC set to Low vdroop. I tested using the Intel stress test that came with the software, not LinX or P95. I ran it at 4.8ghz on the R4E using LLC medium at 1.395v bios, 1.378v load. I didnt run it at 5ghz at the time on the R4E, because the vcore required was around 1.45v load.
Put the board in a case now, with a cheap air cooler running at stock, with mem at 2133mhz. In the process of redoing the old room. Needs painting and a little work.
Did you measure with points? For kicks and giggles which ground did you use? It is odd to me that the R4E would use more volts?
Didnt measure with a DMM, jut using software.
ahh okay