It would appear my conclusions about the current crop of intel mobos running out of power at over 3.5ghz or so would be correct. I have noticed my stability moving slowly backwards with my IT7. From my original 3.6ghz stable / 3.66ghz for benching over the last few days its dropped off to 3.43ghz stable / 3.5ghz for benching. Its definitely not the cpu as ive been able to drop voltage along the way - infact its burned in a little and im now running below default voltage at 3.433ghz. Extra vcore makes no difference to stability and neither does dropping the fsb:mem ratio to 1:1. Ive pulled everything apart down to constituent parts to no avail.
My belief is the extra current the 2.8 is drawing at these speeds is actually wearing out the board. I dont expect it to last more than another fortnight. Power regulation is getting steadily worse with larger and larger variation on vcore under load. Its getting bad enough that im now concerned about actually damaging the chip.
To this end ive ordered 2 new boards today in preparation for the demise of this IT7 - a soltek P4X400 board (has nice large mosfets and some rather powerful looking caps) and the via reference P4PB400 board (some extended delivery time on it - should arrive in a week or so). This IT7 will be moved down to a secondary rig with the 2.26b in it and ill see what happens there. Its a shame as i'll be losing Raid, firewire and all those USB ports, but theyre no use to me if it cant overclock.
I must admit when I originally purchased the IT7 the small size of the mosfets and low power ratings on the caps bothered me a little, but it seemed to have no negative effect on the boards clocking capability. Now that im using more and more power I can see that my original fears were founded. In all honesty I cant blame Abit as they probably never envisaged people starting to approach 4ghz on the IT7. However, the via boards are designed to support the future hyperthreaded P4s at speeds approaching 4ghz anyway, so the whole power regulation circuitry looks a lot more capable.
I cant comment on how my original (made by abit) board would have done, but as a rough guess id suggest it wouldve been a lot more capable than my current (made by ECS - aka PC Chips) board. These ECS boards seem lower quality - they run a lot hotter and clock a lot lower.
Anyway, ill post back on this thread once I have some solid results for the Via boards, but im expecting a lot more stable voltage at higher speeds. I hope im not disappointed.
PiLsY.
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