Thanks god Fr3ak is loyal...
At first i thought that the distance is big...and that's gonna destroy everything...
But i think it is more serious than i first thought...
xaaxxa
Thanks god Fr3ak is loyal...
At first i thought that the distance is big...and that's gonna destroy everything...
But i think it is more serious than i first thought...
xaaxxa
When Mercedes brought their C111 to Talledega years ago and blew away the closed course record did it count? Yes..
That was a "factory" car and a "one of" that no one could buy and was never sold.
Records are records and that is a fact so get over it.
you think its serious??
so you dont know about the baby yet?
Fr3ak you have to tell him!
He has a right to see his son!
PLL voltage is referred to VCCPLL or PLL VCC with nominal value 1.50v+/-5%, and it is input voltage applied to CPU across pin 23 (as intel datasheets stated for Conroe). VCCPLL provides isolated power for internal processor FSB PLLs.
A phase-lock, or phase-locked, loop (PLL) is an electronic control system that generates a signal that is locked to the phase of an input or "reference" signal.
This means internal processor FSB PLLs are circuit responsibles to lock the phase of external FSB (the FSB of the external bus between northbridge and cpu) with internal processor bus.
In very simple words these circuits are responsible to sincronyze the external FSB with internal processor bus where flow all signals outuput from FSB to internal processor bus (command and data) and viceversa.
Now some processors have better internal FSB PLLs than another one, and this mean that that first rpocessor has higher FSB wall. If you want to help to raise CPU FSB wall you have to raise pll voltage because in this way internal processor FSB PLLs become more stable.
Hehe, I know about that bed, it's getting worse every day :P
Thank you, but without you I wouldn't have been able to do the memory justice. Thanks a lot for giving that board to me. IF you ever need it again, just tell me and I will send it back to you.
hehe thanks, it was a really quick attempt to see if the sticks run at those timings at all. I am pretty sure that there is still room for improvement.
I have no idea if the board is a ES or not, but it looks retail to me. Maybe Shamino can bring some light into this discussion about the origin of this board.Originally Posted by Saaya
hehe I know the bad is a mess. I will try to fix it soon, that is for sure. But I can still sleep surprisingly wellOriginally Posted by Saaya
PLL voltage usually helps you to clock the CPU's FSB better when the CPU hits a wall. With most CPUs I have tested I need about +0.1V above 450 MHz FSB. FSB-Termination voltage usually helps to clock the board higher, FSB-wise. I didnt have to use more than +0.15V to hit 500 MHz FSB so far.Originally Posted by Saaya
The 666FSB CPU sound good, but I dont think its gonna come true any time soon. 400MHz will first hit the server market, then desktop CPUs. 666 is still a very long way to go. And even Oskar had a hard time hitting 600 MHz FSB on a retail board, so to think 666 MHz FSB on a retail board will come true son, is basically impossible if you ask me
But 666MHz FSB and 6-6-6 timings looks "damn" good
How could I ever betray you? ^_^
hehe, just make fun on my expense lol
Very nice explanation!=)
Edit: I had half an hour to play with the sticks1 GHz is a no go even with 10-10-10-30. I managed to improve the low latency clock a bit, but not by much. And it seems like I really need 2.24V to boot with cl5 and 750MHz.
I managed to get this 1m stable, but the screenshot is corrupt :/
http://valid.x86-secret.com/show_oc.php?id=239364
Some real stability tests are planned for the weekend![]()
Last edited by Fr3ak; 09-06-2007 at 01:22 PM.
オタク
"Perfection is a state you should always try to attain, yet one you can never reach." - me =)
vincenzo, so does increasing the cpu pll voltage help to get a high fsb stable or does it help to boot and bench at a higher fsb?
It didnt help me to boot and bench at a higher fsb at all, so i left it at auto.
FSB voltage bumped to 1.5v did help though and is needed to reach 530+ with the 6600 in this system.
what cpu are you using?
dreaming of gorillakos strong arms holding you?
what does he have that i dont have? :,(
so fsb vtt or vfsb as its sometimes called is more of a help to get the chipset stable at higher fsbs and to be able to boot at higher fsbs, correct?
well first i could only get around 450fsb with this 6600 but bumping the vcore to 1.5v solved that and i got to 480 iirc, bumping vfsb gave me a headroom to reach 530, above that things got unstable. i tried raising cpu pll voltage but this didnt help me to get 535 stable either and i didnt want to try more vcore with the crfappy hs i was using back then.
but it is possible, and yes you would basically need a custom motherboard but hey, what else is quadfx and intels v8?
they could pick boards that can hit 600+fsb and cpus that can hit 600+fsb.
IF k10 beats 45nm (very unlikely unfortunately) then intel might actually do this... but yeah, its more of a nice thing to dream about
jupp, thanks vincenzo!
have fun then![]()
Few Test Superpi (Comparative in preparation)![]()
I test soon with my P5K3 deluxe too![]()
32mo = OS 2003 32bits optimised by learn![]()
![]()
Saaya...e6600 seems not to be the perfect cpu for p35, a 6600 i've tested, 560 and over on 965... stops @530 on p35!
don't ask me why..maybe new bioses are not perfect for the older cpu steps..
Kam
yeah it's strange
my E6600 L709A958 on Blitz Extreme 485FSB max on Blitz Formula 530FSB max both on water heh.. nearly every cpu i put in my Blitz Extreme maxes 485FSB even ones that do 500FSB on Blitz Formula/P5K Deluxe heh
---
6420 over 540 easily.... 6850 540 easily... and i'm waiting for an E6700 with 580/590 liquid cooled and 610 under LN2...
Kam
i think could be a problem with bios cpu microcode programming... or compatibility..
Since I flash the bios P5K3 and Blitz I am with the max 575/580mhz whereas I arrived has 590mhz in watercooling with my E6600 before
A small Everest towards 4ghz :
![]()
hmmm ill try again to bump pll voltage and see if it helps, thanks man
yeah i noticed the same, but i didnt think it was p35 or p35 ddr3 related... every board i put a cpu in has a different max fsb. even good boards that get a higher fsb out of cpus than other boards sometimes dont like a cpu and i cant reach the same fsb as on other "worse" fsb clocking boards.
we are 4 people now experiencing this...
interesting to see that there seems to be some corelation between this and p35 and maybe even p35 ddr3 compared to p35 ddr2.
thx for sharing your findings
well lets hope its a bios thing and has nothing to do with board design or the ddr3 mem controller limiting the fsb somehow.
What a nice try~~~~~~![]()
Just Tell Me What Love is.....
Your last sentence wasn't true for the testing I have done todayNo FSB boost...
オタク
"Perfection is a state you should always try to attain, yet one you can never reach." - me =)
Nice clocking m8, Im getting some ddr3 myself and I was wondering what's the best price/performance ddr3 mobo?
Regards
Bench System:
CPU:Intel core 2 duo E7400 2.8Ghz @ 3.4Ghz
CPU:Intel core 2 duo E6400 Conroe Batch L629A7XX
CPU:Intel core 2 quad Q9400 2.66Ghz @ 3.0Ghz
MOBO:Asus P5Q Pro
RAM:Corssair 2x1 GB PC6400 DDR2-800
RAM:Corssair 2x2 GB PC6400 DDR2-800
RAM:Avexir DDR2-1066 w/ Handpicked Elpida's
VGA:Asus GTX 560 1GB
HD: Westerdigital 160GB SATA
HD: Westerdigital 500GB SATA
PSU:Coolermaster Silent Pro 700W
Bookmarks