After 4 and a half. I have to turn it off so some critical websites I'm going to (mostly business and shopping ones) won't lag and give me a whole bunch of troubles.To post that 1h screenshot, I had to resubmit the post twice because 10K just stresses the system way too hard. It rose my temps from 65/62/62/64 last time to 68/66/66/67. Now I got a way better fan... a bit on the loud side, but it's acceptable.
Edit: Here, restarted the old Prime but this time, under Vista.Seems like under Vista, stress testing is more stressful?
Maybe hours from now, I'll give you another shot.And by the way, it's "--" for me in Real Temp since even SpeedFan reports the same temp. It's actually 2 or 3 degrees cooler than that in reality (measured) but I'll take it as it is reported by those programs.
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Last edited by RunawayPrisoner; 03-27-2008 at 12:12 PM.
What FPO is the daddy then? I can get these cheap so will get one to try out i think
Okay, as promised, here's another screenshot:
I changed the theme, benched some Crysis, browsed some websites... etc... and she's still going rock solid with 1.304v.
And oh yeah, in case you ask... yes, I DID bench Crysis with Prime running.
Edit: FPO/Batch#: L803B196
Are you guys testing GTL values? Im playing with some, but having a hard time both understanding how they work (especially with 45nm chips) and what values to set. other than that what are your NB volts at 3.6-4.0?
Tweak your Life!
Another two hours, another screenshot (Vista theme color changed on purpose):
Seems really REALLY solid at 1.304v today. I'll start playing with GTL tomorrow to see if I can get to 4GHz... or if I can lower vCore even more.It's been set at "Auto" for a while now... and I thought that if something is not broken, don't fix it, right? But hey, experiments are good. :p
Seriously, you need to stop using 4 instances this old version of prime. It is NOT an accurate test for stability stop misleading readers. Use 2 instances of Orthos, 10K FFTs IN PLACE, Priority 5 or higher and run it WITHOUT any other programs in the background, including RealTemp and CPU-Z.
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Okay then. Right now, I'm trying to get 4.00GHz stable. Once I'm done with that, I'll start the 10K again. (And FYI, it did pass over 4 and a half hour)
Edit: Okay, started it. 4.00GHz seems like it'll need a lot of trials and errors for me, and I'm not up to that tonight. Let's start orthosing.
Oh, and how many hours have to pass for me to know that the CPU is completely stable?
Last edited by RunawayPrisoner; 03-27-2008 at 10:32 PM.
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HEAT
The longer the better![]()
What mobo is that mate ? Im going to go order one ... my P5K is priming at 460 but thats about it .
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Thanks guys.And it's okay. I'd like to see just how much this chip has improved. Over a week, the voltage requirement for stable 3.8GHz has dropped from 1.35v to 1.296v now, and Orthos 10K, as mentioned above, has gone over 3 hours at 1.296v.
I'll keep going for another 5 hours just for the heck of it.
I'm using an ASUS P5E-VM HDMI board without any modification at all. Or maybe I just added too many fans and coolers but eh...
P.S.: And I'll post a screenshot of priming over 5000 hours tomorrow.Quite frankly... didn't expect that to show after just 9 hours of priming, but I guess that's what I have to expect from an old version of Prime95.
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BUMP. It went on for 8 hours before my dad went down and turned the computer off... because he thought I forgot to turn it off! So anyway, that means I couldn't take a screenshot at 8 hours or anything. I'm starting another Prime session with 10K but at 1.288v today to see if the voltage requirement really is dropping day after day. Seems rock solid so far, and will report back in a matter of hours.
RunawayPrisoner, Thanks for all of your work dude.
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No prob. Sincerely, I didn't do much... just about 54000 hours of priming.
^= What in His Name is that? It was only a nine-hour priming session? Oh well...
And here's priming with the new settings and of course, new Prime95, also at 10K like the previous 2 tests that I could never take any screenshot of:
idle 1.304v
load 1.288v
Heavy droops, I know. But I am living with droops and drops rather than avoiding them, as Intel's specsheets even state that droops and drops are somewhat necessary. If it's solid with droops and drops, it's good enough, right?
Last edited by RunawayPrisoner; 03-28-2008 at 11:00 AM.
i did 10 minutes of priming on my e8400 on air at 500mhz FSB x 9. does that count too?
Mmm... yeah. Pretty much? It seems you were only stressing one core, though? And I'd run Prime for at least 4 hours or beyond before I conclude that a clock range is stable.But yeah, each has his own definition of stability, right? I dare say that sometimes, I'd even consider 30-minute priming sessions a success... and continue to drop the volt until it gets really really low.
All I have to say is WOW.
http://valid.x86-secret.com/show_oc.php?id=336593
For the past few days I couldn't get anything over 425fsb now I'm doing 450 with no issues... Its all about the VTT and GTL settings.
Obviously going to push it more tonight... vcore is only @ 1.3v
jaredpace what cooling and which fpo batch...i don't believe you :P
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LC 550W GP// XPERTVISION 9600GT
Yes, that's the spirit!And I want to see this on that X48 motherboard at least!
And... thus far, 3.80GHz stable:
vCore: 1.325v (1.304v idle real, and 1.288v load real)
CPU volt ref: 0.61x
PLL volt: 1.54v (or maybe 1.58v something)
FSB term volt: 1.28v (I think that's it? Or maybe it's 1.36v)
NB volt: 1.47v
NB volt ref: 0.61x
Try that for 475 FSB, guys?![]()
Runnaway - can you tell me what the cpuv ref and nb v ref mean and do ? The voltage settings in bios are self explanatory but I have never touched these multi's . I will try your settings now (P5K).
Just reading this too
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Last edited by aussie-revhead; 03-28-2008 at 01:12 PM.
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Mmm... let's just say they control the way some voltage signals are handled.Using your PLL as the base to multiply, the value after the multiplication should be quite low, but don't let it be too low or too high compared to 2/3 of your FSB Termination voltage. It's trial and error, though, because the real voltage may not be what you set in the BIOS. You can try upping your vCore to compensate for the error in real voltage, though. Also try to consider (vCore x vCore ref)/(vNB x vNB ref). It seems the closer you are to getting 1 and as long as (vCore x vCore ref) is less than (vNB x vNB ref), the system is more stable. It still locks up on me quite a lot at 500MHz FSB though.
Edit: And this may explain why upping the vCore and vNB alone will make the system more stable in some cases... just because as the numbers get larger, they get closer to 1. Disregarding vFSB and vPLL, which are handled automatically by the motherboard (which, I think, also tries to get them to match as close as possible) we have (really high vCore) / (really high vNB) = somewhat... closer to 1. This might also be why on some motherboards, when vCore is settable to 1.90v, vNB can also be set to 1.90v.
I'm still not so sure... but at least that's how I understand it after trying to digest a whole bunch of articles about VTT and stuffs...![]()
Last edited by RunawayPrisoner; 03-28-2008 at 01:20 PM.
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