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Thread: Phenom 9500 w/ MSI K9A2 Platinum

  1. #226
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    beerking: the pics have taken 5 minutes to load already and only two are showing up properly. Mind rehosting them?

  2. #227
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    PK so its not on my end alone I was getting ready to call up the ISP and slap em for continuing to be lame
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  3. #228
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    Last edited by DaMulta; 12-17-2007 at 10:28 PM.

  4. #229
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    Note>>>

    Guys: Please make the pics smaller when you post them, i.e., 800x600 or thumbnails. My work place and Uni will take forever to load the page and I'm sure it's the same for many others. Cropping pics to only show the relevant detail will also be very wise. Thank you.

    Notice I didn't say Girls? If you belong to that category PM me first.

    BTW, very nice there DaMulta. Have you tried increasing VCore and having a low NB and RAM speed?
    Are you using AOD?

  5. #230
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    *** AOD it locks my system all the time.

    I'll wait for a updated Ver.

    2.98 is as high as she will go will all kinds of errors.

    I need to try more settings to see if there is a way to work around this. also it seems when you get that high, the memory control can't hang with 900+Mhz memory.(At least with the divider)

    I'm about to see if this is stable

  6. #231
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    This thing is screaming
    http://img.techpowerup.org/071218/7oc.jpg


    I wish I had a phase about now.

  7. #232
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    Bench it, bench it... bench it.

    Also get it CPU-Z validated as well.

  8. #233
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    For pics you can also use something like Irfanview and save them @ a fraction of their full value. I frequently reduce pics I post to 70-80% of their original save size.

    BTW it's nice to see guys @ 3.0GHz or darn close to it.
    Last edited by Blacklash; 12-18-2007 at 12:11 AM.

  9. #234
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    Quote Originally Posted by KTE View Post
    That's very good actually, thanks.
    They use a very similar if not the same board as I had for my Intel builds, basically the same HDD and the same CPU cooler. If I was to measure at VRMs the wattage I gave will be lower for the CPU as some of that is lost from my quoted figures, and especially if I factor in my voltages, currents and power factor.
    Focusing on the cpu only makes sense if one is interested in technical details.
    But in the end one must pay for the whole systems power consumption.
    Quote Originally Posted by KTE View Post
    22.5W is DC wattage with power saving running. That's close to what Penryn 3GHz does idle too when power saving puts it to 2GHz, around 21.5W. It drops the multi/volts/speeds. With P4, Core 2 and Penryn, voltage/frequencies matter massively to temps and power as you will see by only increasing or decreasing by 0.1V from a nominal voltage. Even by increasing just the FSB you will see a measurable enough increase in temps/power. You can take a look >HERE< for a quick frequency/FSB/volt/VID effect to Penryn power demand.
    Great, thank you, did i get that, Q7700 requires a huge amout more just because of DDR2-1600?
    A note about measuring voltages. I tried three different psu's. A 460W and a 850W PSu with active pfc and a 420W with passive pfc.
    My voltmeter shows 92% efficiency for the 460W active pfc psu and ~75% for the passive one. With the 850W psu the values fluctuate +-20V. Guess the passive one is the best one for measurment.
    Quote Originally Posted by KTE View Post
    You can observe a similar trend with Phenom, but not from 1.0V-1.24V. You will hardly get a power consumption difference even if you dropped the frequency by a full 1GHz. From 1GHz 1.55V to 2.7GHz 1.55V the difference in total system full load power draw is 296VAC vs 330VAC, which is minute.
    34VAC is what my new laptop requires in idle. 2-3W is minute for me atm.
    I have to maintain ~50 pc's at work so each watt equals 50W in my field of activity.
    Quote Originally Posted by KTE View Post
    So from 1GHz to 2.2GHz you will hardly see an idle power consumption difference if you keep the voltage/VID the same (load is obviously different) and even if you dropped the voltage by 0.2V from stock the difference is very small in comparison to what it is with AMD X2, Intel P4, Core 2 or Penryn architecture.
    I experienced a different behaviour if i drop the voltage by 0,2V. Don't have the exact numbers at hand atm but the 0,2V drop saved around 10-15W in idle.
    Quote Originally Posted by KTE View Post
    I will test the Q6600 hopefully myself soon to find out wattages accurately using the exact same hardware and conditions (apart from board/processor).
    Might get one for testing too, have to build an intel rig for a co-worker whoms neighbor works for intel. This intel employee said he can give away older c2d's for free. So i asked for a q6600 for testing purposes. But all that will happen Q1/08.
    Quote Originally Posted by KTE View Post
    The overclocking peak is limited in Intel CPU's by a) chip quality (some are better and some worse for high FSB/high speeds) b) stock VID c) stock voltage d) stock multi e) motherboard f) cooling and thus, considering a) and e) are good, the cooler you go, the higher you can effectively reach (until the chip or cooling limit is reached).

    The overclocking peak is limited in AMD CPU's by a) chip quality b) stock VID c) stock voltage d) stock multi. Cooling doesn't seem to be the limit at all because we can go far cooler, the chip stays very cool and yet you won't see a difference in MHz gained.

    On a good chip and board;
    The limit with Intel CPU's is heat/power/voltage (same as P4).
    The limit with AMD CPU's is processor technology (same as A64).

    What it effectively means is;
    For Intel to speed down the fab size scale is nothing but pure enlarged benefits in every way in terms of higher transistor switching speeds, reliability, less leakage, lower volts, less heat, less TDP, higher frequencies, better performance. They need it and they know it and that's why they push down very fast when they get stuck at the max TDP with their CPU's. I've not seen the chips pushed yet to their peak, I mean absolute peak which someone like my tutor whose a government physicist can test which requires more effective cooling and conditions. Sub -200-250C and you will see their peak with the best chips chips. I believe their architectural peak is like that of P4 and Tejas, around 7-10GHz.
    LOL, you don't have a picture of such an testing environment you can post i guess. What do they use to get those temps, cryostatic temperature regulator ?
    I studied physics for three years. But that was 10 years ago and i never needed that knowledge at work, so i forgott even the basic principles.
    Quote Originally Posted by KTE View Post
    And I DO believe Intel is trying to get that dream "Tejas" speed out still, but cannot do it, lower fab node is not improving their TDP enough to meet those demands, so they now need other ways around this (more cores/multiple threads per core/RAM inside CPU aka cache/tweaks) whilst still trying for higher speeds. One node down should get them 4GHz retail dual-core I reckon.
    Quote Originally Posted by KTE View Post
    But for AMD, to attain higher frequencies since A64 days, you have to simply change the processing manufacturing technology and design first and foremost because that's where the limit lies, not in heat/voltage/temps.
    That equals to my findings during oc trials. My 9500 does not like voltages above 1,45V. Runs stable at 224MHz with 1,45 but freezes or powers out if i apply 1,475V. CPU temp during load is ~60°, which should not be a problem.

    Quote Originally Posted by KTE View Post
    So running from 65nm to 32nm isn't going to have even a 50% benefit for AMD compared to that Intel will have, unless there are radical changes.
    Quote Originally Posted by KTE View Post
    It won't allow them much higher frequencies, certainly not the same as Penryn at 32nm can get or even what Core 2 at 65nm can potentially get with cold. I believe their architecture peak is like that of A64, around 4-5GHz and that's what they're trying to reach. I don't know what they're doing to circumvent this or even if they want to. With native quad, it throws things backwards from X2 so another two tweaked cores, one node down and you'll probably be able to get X2 speeds again.
    Did not follow the whole low vs high k discussion. Wasn't it mentioned that amd plans to go low-k on 32nm or even at 45nm?
    Can you circumscribe the phrase "one node down" please, must admin that i'm not completely sure how to translate it.
    BTW: bingo13 mentioned that after he killed his 9600 he got a new 0744 9600 which works more reliable. My 9500 is a 0742, what is yours?

  10. #235
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    Well a "gang" of professional physicists with engineers have enough of the credentials and knowledge needed to test such things to their theaoretical peak -> like what is done at LHC. This needs professional rather than amateur overseeing. I've seen similar major testings at Lockheed where my uncle used to supervise, the experiments (trials and testings) done for the government are simply mind boggling and always held under secrecy since no one else but one or two government agencies working with the department of defense will ever know or be able to do them. Just like how the internet was made. The equipment needed is usually not available to anyone other in the world apart from similar contracting companies. I guarantee you they have and are working on some cooling devices you have never heard of and many times never will.

    Lower fab node means a smaller manufacturing process i.e., 65nm to 45nm, or 45nm to 32nm, etc.
    High-k allows lower power saving, larger leakage but higher frequnecies.
    Low-k allows large power savings, much less leakage but lower frequnecies.

    Are you sure about your efficiency? APFC will be higher than just PFC by circuit design limitations.

    My 9500 is running on WCG for just over a day now at 2.42GHz CPU, near 2GHz NB/HT. No problems at all.

    0743.

    I swear before it was on WCG I could not put the HT 1MHz above without freezes and delays for 2 days.
    Now I moved it 10MHz up and down through AOD and it moved very fast (no clock generator delay - instant clock changes like with C2D).

    This is just so confusing.

  11. #236
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    The Govt/Internet?

    You mean Al Gore?

    Metal Gates seem to be a good thing from all I've read, allowing both High speeds, and decreased leakage.
    Zen2 Has brought AMD back!

  12. #237
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    Nah don't bother with him.

    Low-k allows more power savings than high-k.

  13. #238
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    Quote Originally Posted by KTE View Post
    Well a "gang" of professional physicists with engineers have enough of the credentials and knowledge needed to test such things to their theaoretical peak -> like what is done at LHC. This needs professional rather than amateur overseeing. I've seen similar major testings at Lockheed where my uncle used to supervise, the experiments (trials and testings) done for the government are simply mind boggling and always held under secrecy since no one else but one or two government agencies working with the department of defense will ever know or be able to do them. Just like how the internet was made. The equipment needed is usually not available to anyone other in the world apart from similar contracting companies. I guarantee you they have and are working on some cooling devices you have never heard of and many times never will.
    Ah ok so they use tesla waves for cooling.
    Quote Originally Posted by KTE View Post
    Lower fab node means a smaller manufacturing process i.e., 65nm to 45nm, or 45nm to 32nm, etc.
    High-k allows lower power saving, larger leakage but higher frequnecies.
    Low-k allows large power savings, much less leakage but lower frequnecies.
    Quote Originally Posted by muzz View Post
    Metal Gates seem to be a good thing from all I've read, allowing both High speeds, and decreased leakage.
    Lucky me does not rely on that type of knowledge to make living from.
    Dont know if that was postet in the news section but this is a pic of a 32nm high-k waver ibm showed.

    Article (german)
    Quote Originally Posted by KTE View Post
    Are you sure about your efficiency? APFC will be higher than just PFC by circuit design limitations.
    What did I say? I'll add a few imgages.




    460W APFC (Zalman ZM460B-APS)


    420W PPFC (XILENCE XP420)


    Yuk, now I'm confused, thought the APFC one tricks my voltmeter and the efficiency mentioned by the manufracture is more reliable.
    But both setups had the same load applied and they correlate very close in DC. So this Zalman PSU seems to be pretty good in terms of efficiency.

    Quote Originally Posted by KTE View Post
    My 9500 is running on WCG for just over a day now at 2.42GHz CPU, near 2GHz NB/HT. No problems at all.

    0743.
    Ok I'll photochop mine, maybe that helps.
    That might explain why my cpu needs more voltage.
    Quote Originally Posted by KTE View Post
    I swear before it was on WCG I could not put the HT 1MHz above without freezes and delays for 2 days.
    Now I moved it 10MHz up and down through AOD and it moved very fast (no clock generator delay - instant clock changes like with C2D).

    This is just so confusing.
    Indeed, most significant limit here seem to be the CPU voltage (<=1,45V). I layed down the voltage drop cpu-z shows if prime95 is running. Above 1,45 V it raises to 0,064V.

    Quote Originally Posted by muzz View Post
    The Govt/Internet?

    You mean Al Gore?
    Can it be he meant he aided the development of the internet?
    Last edited by justapost; 12-18-2007 at 08:03 AM.

  14. #239
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    I'm going on about 7 hours now with this test.



    To night I am going to install my other HD2900PRO flash teh voltage up on it, and see what a max run will do.


    I do think that the 9500 will do more, but I need to try other settings.
    Last edited by DaMulta; 12-18-2007 at 06:22 AM.

  15. #240
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    Quote Originally Posted by justapost View Post
    Ah ok so they use tesla waves for cooling.
    Tesla waves? At LHC they use 10,000 tonnes of liquid nitrogen to cool the equipment to 80K and then 120 tonnes of cryoplant liquid helium takes over to cool to 1.9K with a very high pressure supercritical gas. CERN scientists started development of the cold compressors which allow 1.9K temps 10 years ago. This is true science.
    What did I say? I'll add a few imgages.

    460W APFC


    420W PPFC
    in progress
    That's good power factor, as I expected.
    Can it be he meant he aided the development of the internet?
    Al Gore? No way, those puppets know nothing about science. It's the companies they contract who develop everything, the scientists.

    Quote Originally Posted by DaMulta View Post
    I'm going on about 7 hours now with this test.

    http://img.techpowerup.org/071218/safe.jpg

    To night I am going to install my other HD2900PRO flash teh voltage up on it, and see what a max run will do.

    I do think that the 9500 will do more, but I need to try other settings.
    Yours should do more than mine stable since you've benched higher MHz. What was your batch number?
    Look for this number:




    I think I'm about to be sacked from work today because I've been on and off the PC all day... and the bossman is giving me weird looks.

  16. #241
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    Quote Originally Posted by KTE View Post
    Tesla waves? At LHC they use 10,000 tonnes of liquid nitrogen to cool the equipment to 80K and then 120 tonnes of cryoplant liquid helium takes over to cool to 1.9K with a very high pressure supercritical gas. CERN scientists started development of the cold compressors which allow 1.9K temps 10 years ago. This is true science.
    Yeah your right using current technologie on a professional level is the way. I was just kidding, tesla wave theorie with all it's impacts sometimes gets used as a way to save all the worlds problems.
    Quote Originally Posted by KTE View Post
    That's good power factor, as I expected.
    I added imges from the ppfc psu above. The active PSU seems to have a efficiency above 90% with a load around 70W VAC. You found that suspicious few days ago, as did I. Need to get more background info about that issue, will do some online research about that issue.
    Quote Originally Posted by KTE View Post
    Al Gore? No way, those puppets know nothing about science. It's the companies they contract who develop everything, the scientists.
    I assume he did not write the speech including the claim he invented the internet.
    Quote Originally Posted by KTE View Post
    I think I'm about to be sacked from work today because I've been on and off the PC all day... and the bossman is giving me weird looks.
    LOL. Lost focus on day-to-day business here too in the last two weeks. But I work as a self-employed person, so it will only hurt my account balance a little.
    Hope you made it hired thru that day.

  17. #242
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    Achim,

    Ah OK. The first reading on the meter is watts, the second is the VA and the third the power factor (P(W)/S(VA)=PF i.e., 176.5/185.4 = 0.952 or 95.2%). These meters are incapable of showing PSU efficiency since you need an ammeter or a clamp meter or a SMPS ATE to measure that using values of how much amps each rail is carrying from the PSU and what the voltage for each rail is (multiply the two for the DC wattage) compared to how much VAC is being drawn in. So it's the ratio of how much the PSU pulls and how much it then gives out which is the PSU efficiency. Power factor that is being reported above is very different.

    Youre power factor radings are how they should be. APFC is getting 0.95 PF while PFC is getting 0.78 PF. That's how it should be realistically. To measure efficiency you have to look at the manufacturer testing reports, do it yourself if you have the equipment or knowledge (large corporations or industries have engineers with the relevant tools many times), or look towards people wo have reviewed similar items like online websites such as PCPerspective, Anandtech, Toms Hardware, Hardforum, Techgage, Jonnyguru.com and so on. They have the relevant equipment to be able to measure the PSU efficiency at different loads. Inductive or capacitive loads, the efficiency (and power factor) will be fluctuating and never constant, so at 100W DC your PSU might be 74% efficient while at 200W it might be 76% and at 300W it might be 78% (and so on).

    The Zalman 460W ultra quiet PSU you have came out before the wave of 80%+ efficient started popping up and it didn't have the best efficiency in the non-80+ PSU's either, since the Seasonic PSU's typically held that spot and they topped out at around 81-74% efficiency throughout the loads. At low loads these larger PSU's typically have low efficiency, like 68-74% below 100W DC. Yours 'aint 80% efficient PSU throughout the loads, bare this in mind, it's 75-80% at >220VAC below 40C above 80W DC AFAIK and I don't remember what it's report found the max efficiency at. It would be near the 50% range (near 270-300W DC).
    So... to find out what apporixmate DC wattage your system is pulling, get the Watts figure on the energy monitor and multiply by 0.78 (at best, meaning it will give the largest possible DC power consumption figure) if your loads are at >220VAC and above 100W VAC.
    Taking for example your Zalman 460W SMPS power consumption picture, we wil have;

    176.5 * 0.78 = 138W DC (rounded up)

    That's the max power consumption of that system possible at that load with that setup. In reality it will actually be lower because a) I used max possible PSU efficiency which will not be true, it would be around 76% IMO b) you lose some current at the voltage regulators and convertors (+12V has to be converted to the required CPU voltage, etc) c) connector/wire resistence and rail voltage losses means lower actual total watts pulled by a component.

    Ultra Quiet PSU's are not normally very good with efficiency at all you see, medicore at best since it's a balance and the temps need to remain low for the PSU to work adequately.


  18. #243
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    Quote Originally Posted by justapost View Post
    Dont know if that was postet in the news section but this is a pic of a 32nm high-k waver ibm showed.

    Article (german)
    Toshiba joined the "alliance". This looks more like warfare against the wealthy giant.

  19. #244
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    hi there.

    I tried clocking the 9500 on the K9A2 and through the bios (version 1.0 official)

    and the max i got was 235x11 before it refused to boot/post. at 235x11, I would get lockups at AOD(sometimes), winrar when unzipping >40mb files, installing >100mb apps. (both numbers are rough estimates)

    at that time of 235x11, iirc the bios i had that time didnt have the options for selecting Pstates so couldnt do much. but i did try lowering the HTT multipliers below the HTT speeds

    can you share the P states entries for your higher clocked attempts that were successful? I would like to attempt changing the nb and htt part to see whether has my chip and board reached it's potential.


    lastly, without swopping the chip and board, how do i know which is the limiting factor ?
    where can I find a AMD phenom keychain?

  20. #245
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    Hi Emperor
    Quote Originally Posted by Emperor View Post
    can you share the P states entries for your higher clocked attempts that were successful? I would like to attempt changing the nb and htt part to see whether has my chip and board reached it's potential.
    In Cell Menu>AM2+ P-States>Enable choose:

    CPU FID 06
    CPU VID 28
    CPU DID 1
    NB FID 03
    NB VID 36
    NB DID 1

    -Leave HT under Cell Menu to "Auto". Set your RAM on a divider that will be well within its specification with high latencies.
    -Set all tRFC values to 196ns in DRAM Config.
    -Set high HT and CPU volts (changing volts from BIOS works best, as many times changing them within Windows will not actually change them).
    -Disable all unnecessary BIOS items (peripherals) and services/processes from running at startup.
    -Bootup with whatever is max HT bootable and see if you can use AOD then (leave 2 Windows Management (forgetting the exact name right now) services running)

    See what you get. Best to learn all of it following this link because without understanding you won't get as far: http://www.xtremesystems.org/forums/...d.php?t=167977

    lastly, without swopping the chip and board, how do i know which is the limiting factor ?
    Boards will do far more, guranteed. However a bad BIOS can easily give you bad performance and bad overclocking. We'll just have to wait and see with the new BIOSes. I was told they should've been out last week as well as a new AOD, but they never came.

    Whatever you do, stress your system (stability). You might find what I found after 4 weeks of usage;

    High overclockablility at the start > gradually falls to near 2.5GHz maximum.
    Last edited by KTE; 12-18-2007 at 11:01 PM.

  21. #246
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    I don't know if i missed it but have a Question: When updating the BIOS do you get a option of turning off the "errata protection" function like on a DFI mobo. I hope so as i am getting the MSI today.

  22. #247
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    Quote Originally Posted by Swanie View Post
    I don't know if i missed it but have a Question: When updating the BIOS do you get a option of turning off the "errata protection" function like on a DFI mobo. I hope so as i am getting the MSI today.
    Nope. Only one BIOS has the errata patch that I know of and it's not the one you can find around much. The main ones 1.0, 1.1, 1.12, 1.13 do not have it so you're unaffected.

  23. #248
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    thanks KTE

    actually i am running
    CPU FID 06
    CPU VID 28
    CPU DID 1
    NB FID 03
    NB VID 36
    NB DID 1

    but AOD displays my cpu speed as current speed = 1636Mhz. target speed = 2365mhz

    CPU-z displays 2365mhz, crystalId shows the same as AOD.
    where can I find a AMD phenom keychain?

  24. #249
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    That's strange. It's downclocked you. It does that if HT is too high or NB is too high usually, not low.

    AOD shows the correct values. CPU-Z can't pick up this.

    What DID options did you have for both?

    Try HT 5x and then bootup. If it still shows the same, try putting NB FID to 04.

  25. #250
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    Quote Originally Posted by KTE View Post
    That's strange. It's downclocked you. It does that if HT is too high or NB is too high usually, not low.

    AOD shows the correct values. CPU-Z can't pick up this.

    What DID options did you have for both?

    Try HT 5x and then bootup. If it still shows the same, try putting NB FID to 04.
    I tried another set of values after posting that reply

    HT 235mhz
    ht multi = 9x
    cpu fid = 4
    cpu did = 0
    nb fid = 7
    nb did = 0

    so on cpu z it shows 235x10, HT link 2115mhz, mem at 940mhz. tRFC=195 as suggested.

    though weird thing is, after setting it in the bios, it took sometime to post. it took so long i was close to clearing the cmos.

    will try ht 5X
    where can I find a AMD phenom keychain?

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