While I was doing some research, I had seen a refrence to the fact that with the new cores, the VTT seems to be much lower. I'm not sure if it's because the VID on the new chips is lower or what, but I did see a mention of that somewhere.
I'm running between 462 and 475 right now on my P5K, and I'm sure I would end up trying to get at least 500 if I get a 9450. If you are running above 450, could you see if there is any heat coming off of them? I'm not asking you to put your fingers on the line, but if you have a temp probe or thermal gun, see if they seem to get hot with orthos at high FSB.
I always seem to get crappy chips, so I'll probably be running a somewhat high vCore on the chip.
Well, Q9450 has x8 multi if i'm not mistaken, so for 3.6GHz(which is more than enough 24/7 cpu power on a quad core) you need 450fsb and for that on this mobo you can pretty much leave everything on on default. And this, i believe, any Q9450 will be able to do.
I'm running 450x8 setting on my E6750 G0 for 24/7, though i can use much higher when benching and doing SPi runs.
I can only tell you the temps i get from coretemp and speedfan when orthos and prime95 v255 are in full load, i don't have any other thermal tools in my case.
No problem, I just enjoy tweaking things. My 6750 is about 99% stable, (that 1% comes from the fact that this board is not stable at stock settings) and I have gotten it up to around 3.85 with temps that are still within reason. I will probably try to do some testing, but if I get a 9450 my goal is to get it 4g stable. That won't be for a while though, as I bought the P35-T2R instead of getting a new cpu. My P5K is feeling the end if it's life cycle anyway.
Assuming no outstanding issues with memory or processor, stock instability will come down to voltages and/or memory timings.
Hopes and expectations are already being set higher then what most likely will be shown to be the norm. Although everything could change with the retail chips, for 45nm quads I'd be lowering my expectation to 450 FSB 24/7 if not less.
The board its self was an outstanding issue. I get so many weird errors, even at the stock loaded bios settings. I could run memtest 1 day and have it go 8+ hours, then the next day it would do nothing but error.
And I and know what I hope for probably won't really happen, but I feel I deserve a good chip after the last few crappy one's that I've had. It's said that the people who are the most successful in life, are also the most optimistic.
Silverstone Temjin TJ-09BW w/ Silverstone DA750
Asus P8P67
2600K w/ Thermalright Venomous X Black w/ Sanyo Denki San Ace 109R1212H1011
8GB G.Skill DDR-1600 7-8-7-24
Gigabyte GTX 460 1G
Modded Creative X-Fi Fatal1ty w/ Klipsch Promedia 2.1
1 X 120GB OCZ Vertex
1 X 300GB WD Velociraptor HLFS
1 X Hitachi 7K1000 1TB
Pioneer DVR-216L DVD-RW
Windows 7 Ultimate 64
Stock VTT for 45nm is 0.100V lower then 65nm processors. Doesn't seem like much but this also sets the crossover point for the GTL circuits.
Latest beta is on the top, 01/09.![]()
http://us.dfi.com.tw/Support/Downloa...FLAG=B&SITE=US
Awesome, thanks. I didn't see the beta bios page anywhere, I only saw the official.
Does this board have a "E-Z flash" built into it like on the Asus P0S board, or do I have to go the old fashion dos route?
Edit: I'm impressed, it seems like they still have monthly updates for the board.
You can update bios via WinFlash, there is a tutorial how to do it, it's the safest way, recommended by DFI.It's very easy actually.
You are taking a huge gamble using WinFlash to flash your bios in O.S
It most certainly Is Not the safest way to Flash Bios!
SuperMicro X8SAX
Xeon 5620
12GB - Crucial ECC DDR3 1333
Intel 520 180GB Cherryville
Areca 1231ML ~ 2~ 250GB Seagate ES.2 ~ Raid 0 ~ 4~ Hitachi 5K3000 2TB ~ Raid 6 ~
I've flashed like 4-5 various bios on my old UltraII-M2 Infinity and the same amount on this LanParty and no trouble for me here, that's at least reason enough to recommend it to other people.![]()
Yes those horror stories are true, DONT USE WINFLASH, Download the Diamond Flash Bios, set all stocks in the bios, and then flash with the Diamond Flash floppy in DOS mode, safest way to do it.
Ive seen to many dead boards from using WinFlash I would not risk it nor take the chance.
Just for future reference if you want any DFI beta bioses in the future, just type into google "DFI Beta Bios" without the quotes and goto the 3rd listing down (for me), Just labelled DFI.
http://www.google.co.uk/search?hl=en...eta+Bios&meta=
http://us.dfi.com.tw/Support/Downloa...&STATUS_FLAG=B
Last edited by Seanie's Show; 01-17-2008 at 02:22 PM.
Intel Core i7 920 2.66ghz @ 4.3ghz HT Enabled, core @ 1.34v, VTT @ 1.28v, NB @ 1.30v (212 x 21) Batch No: 3910A369
6gb (3x2gb) G.Skill RipJawsX DDR3 17000C9 2133MHz @ 1640mhz 8-8-8-24-1T
Gigabyte G1.Sniper Rev 1.0 @ 205fsb Beta Bios
1 x OCZ Agility 3 120gb SSD, AHCI
1 x Western Digital 500gb SATAIII 16mb Cache HDD, AHCI
Sony DVD +/- R/RW/RAM x22 Dual Layer, AHCI
2 x Saphire ATI Radeon R9 270 2gb (Crossfire)
Gigabyte Odin 850w Modular PSU (Software Controlled)
EK Supreme HF Copper LGA1366, Laing D5 Pump, 2 x 240mm Radiator & 120mm Radiator
Cooler Master HAF XB LAN Box
Windows Se7en Pro x64 bit.
The bios chip on that board is not hard to replace, so you can't actually "Kill" the board from a bad flash, just temp. brick it. With any flashing, you take a chance, I'll probably go USB stick route because that makes me feel safest. Anyone know if you can flash past a past bios easily with their flasher? I know with my asus I had to use a specal revision to "downgrade" my bios.
Winflash is completely save as long as you happen to own a EPROM programmer. Seriously, if done correctly very seldom is there an issue. Default settings loaded in the BIOS, voltages set to the proper values and no more then two sticks of ram in the board. My favorite method is with a USB stick. Super fast and about as safe as a floppy.
Out of all the methods I've ever used to flash a DFI BIOS I think TMODS CD is the easiest and safest way! The only problem is that it's a pain to update with new BIOS releases if your not good at messing around with ISO images!
Asus Maximus III Formula (2001)
Intel i7 860 (L924B516)
Noctua D14
Corsairs CMG4GX3M2A2000C2 (2 x 2GB) RAM
eVGA GTX480
DD-H20
BIX GTX360
MCP35X PWM
Creative X-Fi Titanium PCI-e
LG GGC-H20L Blu-Ray
Toughpower 850w Modular
GSkill Phoenix Pro SSD 120GB
HEAT
According to windwithme, the BIOS are the same btw the DK P35 and the UT P35. Nobody's posted any settings in the Dark threads.
http://www.xtremesystems.org/forums/...d.php?t=168235
Is this the case? If so, looks like I have 125 pages of this thread to start reading.
Gaming rig
CPU.........................Intel QX6850 @ 3800, 8x475
Motherboard.............DK P35 Dark
Video.......................8800 Ultra
RAM.........................4x1 OCZ Titanium Alpha VX2
Hard drives...............2 Raptors in RAID0
Sound card...............X-Fi Fatal1ty, Medusa 5.1 headphones
PSU.........................PCP&C 1KW(custom build)
CPU cooling..............Liquid
Hardware cooling.......Liquid cooled card and NB
Case........................Custom 22" cube by M.M.
OS...........................XP Pro
The BIOS of both series do bare some resemblance but that's where the similarities end. The power planes are different as well as the components used. Settings are not going to transfer from one series to the other. And if a person tries to run some of the 24/7 settings found in this thread it will most likely kill the board. This is one case where you really do get what you paid for.
Thanks Praz, saved me some time.
Gaming rig
CPU.........................Intel QX6850 @ 3800, 8x475
Motherboard.............DK P35 Dark
Video.......................8800 Ultra
RAM.........................4x1 OCZ Titanium Alpha VX2
Hard drives...............2 Raptors in RAID0
Sound card...............X-Fi Fatal1ty, Medusa 5.1 headphones
PSU.........................PCP&C 1KW(custom build)
CPU cooling..............Liquid
Hardware cooling.......Liquid cooled card and NB
Case........................Custom 22" cube by M.M.
OS...........................XP Pro
Yes, Praz is right. As Dark series LanParty P35 has 4-phase PWM and UT P35 Lanparty has 8-phase PWM the settings you might put may be similar but very different so i wouldn't call it safe to try and but the same settings, especially on quad core cpu.
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