Quote Originally Posted by GJW View Post
The first problem is more of an annoyance but maybe someone knows what to do. Sometimes when it boots, just about 100% of the time after it sits for a bit (I travel quite a bit) and you turn it on, it turns itself on and off several times and then eventually boots. It will also do this after changes to the bios. During the changes to the bios sometimes it will boot, sometimes it won’t. When it won’t it just keeps turning on and off and eventually if I shut off the power supplies and give it about 5 minutes, it will boot ok, even if you change nothing in the bios. Even if I leave the bios at default settings it will do this after it sits for a few days and you turn it on. I contacted Intel and they told me it was the memory because the board is only designed for 1.5 volt memory and that memory runs at 1.9. I also tried some of the same memory but not Intel “certified” and had the same problem. (I also had this issue with another DX38BT board. The initial board I received did this, but the chipset drivers were messed up and it would not recognize the USB ports. Something when very wrong in the bios recovery (probably the fact that the optical drives were not really recognized during boot) so I sent that board back).
Don't listen to Intel.

I have the same problem. It's an annoyance I don't deal with by just leaving it on and crunching for WCG.

It's got something to do with the board resetting the voltage regulators.

Quote Originally Posted by GJW View Post

Second problem.

I have an issue, or really several issues overclocking the CPU. The main problem, I think, is the fact that I can’t seem to be able to actually change the CPU core voltage. I can change it in the bios, but when looking at CPU-Z it doesn’t show any change in voltage. In addition to this the CPU core temp agrees with the fact that voltage is not changing. When running at 100% load I do not see any change in core temp (averages about 100 F at full load no matter what CPU voltage is set at). However when I use the 300 mV offset there is clearly a significant increase in CPU core temp at 100% load (CPU core temp goes to about 140F with the offset at full load). Both the QX6850 and the QX9650 exhibited these characteristics.

From an overclocking standpoint with stock voltage I can get it about 3.65 GHz. With the 300 mV offset I can actually go to 4.42 GHz. No matter what combination of voltages, bus speeds, CPU multiplier, etc, I cannot set the bus speed faster than about 360 MHz or it is not stable. From a memory standpoint I normally just use XMP Profile 1, which is automatic memory overclocking. But I’ve had the same problem when I use my own memory timings.

Of course I talked to Intel about this issue as well and they won’t even talk to you if you are overclocking. I don’t want their help, I just want to know if there an issue with their hardware or something with my system.

I hope there is something easy that I have messed up or am overloocking. If anyone can offer help I would really appreciate it.

jerry
Don't listen to Intel.

CPU-Z and CoreTemp report the VID that's requested, not the actual voltage. Get Everest. It'll show you the actual voltages as reported by the sensor chip. The guide in my sig talks about this and even though it's for the D975XBX2, 99% applies to the DX38BT.

STAY AWAY FROM THE 300MV OFFSET UNLESS YOU ARE BENCHING WITH SUB-ZERO COOLING. Think about it...If you have voltage set at 1.5000 and set the 300mv offset, you're pumping 1.8v to the processor. Not good.

You have to manually set the memory timings or you won't be successful. Use the calculator in my signature to see what results from various FSB, Reference Frequency and Memory Frequency settings. Also DDR3 memory is VERY sensitive to voltage, both under and over. You really have to take your time with this board.

What are you goals for the board? It'll help us give you some guidance.

Oh yeah,