Thats a good ball park. My 555 and 955 all started to get bad in the 55-60c range. All my best over clocks are definatley under 50c loaded. There are exceptions, some here have gotten air OC's in the 60s and 4+GHz. Those are very special parts and are not the norm. Out of 5 PII Ive had none would do anything over 3.6GHz stable on air&load. All would run to 80c @ stock speeds just fine.
RussC
My Rig
PII955-C2 3.8GHz, 2.5MHz NB
GSkill 2x2GB DDR3-2400@900MHz
M4A87T Antec 900 Case, Custom Mods x5Fans
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4xSunon 4.5W Fans, DD12V-D5 Laing Variable Pump
DD MC-TDX Water Block
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If you can keep it under 50C, you'll get very good clocks![]()
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Mine will do 50 run runs of Intel burn test at 4.1Ghz with a load voltage of 1.55v with a CPU temp of 70 degrees C.
If I drop down to 4Ghz stable Max temp is between 55-60 degrees C.
My 1075T has a Thermochill PA 120.3 all to itself so how am I going to improve my cooling?
Particle there are issues I have with this list...
For example a post like Daveburts...(not to pick on him, it was just there)
He has 1.45v set, idles at 1.452, and in second screen 1.464, chances are load is at least 1.476-1.488v in CPU-Z and upwards of 1.49v on the DMM.
I can post 4.1 stable set at 1.43-1.44v, and 4 Ghz stable at "1.39v" and CPUNB at 3 Ghz at 1.33v if we all went that way.
My CPU doesnt even do 4.2 stable AFAIK most of the time I crash around an hour.
I'm not a believer in long stability tests especially at high volts considering my M4A89TD only has a 6+2 (doubled 3+1) phase setup. My mosfets are up in 95-100c range with just 4 Ghz/1.4v.
Typcally anything over 4 hours is overkill as well, all you will have past 4 hours is a CPU failing because of heat (unrealistic unless you run WCG) or a board failure.
I'd gladly run 4 hours, maybe 6-7 if I start it when I go to bed and turn it off or see what went up when I wake up...but I normally will not go for a 4.2 Ghz stable run at "1.51v" (1.54 real) load and not watch it.
Last edited by BeepBeep2; 05-22-2011 at 03:59 PM.
Smile
I'm Intel burn test stable at 4Ghz with a load voltage of 1.44v and Intel burn test stable at 4.1Ghz with a load Vcore of 1.5v
Max temp at 4Ghz according the CPU socket temp was 57c
Max temp at 4.1Ghz according to the socket temp was 62c
You have a good point on Vcore...my last submission here was with Bios Value and if you look at ss, voltage is 0.04v lower...
As for stability, my last is also 8hr prime, which finally seemed not to be rock stable....something wrong with my IMC maybe, i don't know, but it could not be revealed even with 8hr prime stress...
Yeap, that's why the 8hr Prime doesn't seem to me to belong to my stability criteria anymore...just an intermediate step...
Its not even that...
I run 1 1/2 hour OCCT Small for CPU only, 30 pass LinX for IMC and 4 Hour prime 95 for memory. Most of the time LinX will fail for IMC within 15 passes when Prime will take hours...
Then I game extensively like I usually do and within the next week if I dont crash, have programs crash or BSOD at any point that is when I will label it stable.
Smile
Prime95 Small FFT's = CPU only stress?
Prime95 Large FFT = ?
Prime95 Blend = Whole system?
If I mandated people use calibrated DMMs to measure vCore under load, we'd have virtually no entries where people could be classified as "stable". It would be even less useful than what we've got now, which I believe is a reasonable compromise. Since we don't exist as members of a laboratory, I just use the highest number I'm presented with. When people say "xV BIOS / xV load" or whatever, I pick whichever is higher so that the chart errors as much as possible on the side of worst case scenario. As for heat, if you're going to fail at due to thermals, you'll probably be caught within 8 hours. It's not uncommon for a CPU to fail only after extended durations even way beyond 8 hours. My personal standard is 24 hours with 48 being better, and I've seen failures at 25-26 hours for example. It doesn't take that long for things to heat up and saturate thermal solutions. Maybe your chip is on the fence. If it is, you're not stable regardless of the cause. Your definition of stable, beep, is more of a definition of stable-ish, and that's not good enough for me.
Blend is better than small or large FFTs imo. Who cares if your CPU is stable if the memory system isn't. It's an unusable system either way, you know?
No, the system isn't perfect, but it would be unrealistic to expect members of a forum like this to contribute better information on average. This is an informal setting.
Last edited by Particle; 05-23-2011 at 06:13 AM.
Particle's First Rule of Online Technical Discussion:
As a thread about any computer related subject has its length approach infinity, the likelihood and inevitability of a poorly constructed AMD vs. Intel fight also exponentially increases.
Rule 1A:
Likewise, the frequency of a car pseudoanalogy to explain a technical concept increases with thread length. This will make many people chuckle, as computer people are rarely knowledgeable about vehicular mechanics.
Rule 2:
When confronted with a post that is contrary to what a poster likes, believes, or most often wants to be correct, the poster will pick out only minor details that are largely irrelevant in an attempt to shut out the conflicting idea. The core of the post will be left alone since it isn't easy to contradict what the person is actually saying.
Rule 2A:
When a poster cannot properly refute a post they do not like (as described above), the poster will most likely invent fictitious counter-points and/or begin to attack the other's credibility in feeble ways that are dramatic but irrelevant. Do not underestimate this tactic, as in the online world this will sway many observers. Do not forget: Correctness is decided only by what is said last, the most loudly, or with greatest repetition.
Rule 3:
When it comes to computer news, 70% of Internet rumors are outright fabricated, 20% are inaccurate enough to simply be discarded, and about 10% are based in reality. Grains of salt--become familiar with them.
Remember: When debating online, everyone else is ALWAYS wrong if they do not agree with you!
Random Tip o' the Whatever
You just can't win. If your product offers feature A instead of B, people will moan how A is stupid and it didn't offer B. If your product offers B instead of A, they'll likewise complain and rant about how anyone's retarded cousin could figure out A is what the market wants.
Currently running prime95 on blend at 4.1ghz with a load Vcore of 1.488v
Memory is at 1826Mhz @ 9-11-9-27-1T with 1.65v
NB is at 2739Mhz
HT is at 2191Mhz
Max temp is 59c and it's been going for 30 mins with no problems at all, even with me using the computer
On the old BIOS I need a load Vcore of 1.55v to handle 4.1Ghz
Will find my max CPU overclock then work on tweaking the RAM speed and timings![]()
I didnt ask for DMM numbers. I asked for one standard.
That is either:
1. Post what you set and mention you have LLC on or off
2. Post the voltage CPU-Z tells you on load, not the voltage you have on idle or the voltage you set.
People are currently doing all three.
Daveburt's CPU is listed at 1.45v when he idles at 1.464 and to my knowledge of LLC he's up around 1.48 on load.
Particle I'm pretty sure I can pass 8-12 hours blend and fail LinX...I can also make it pass LinX and fail Blend...you tell me why.
Whats the point in failing at 8 to 12 hours because of heat?
On water we have equilibrium, it will even out after about 8-9 hours. ...on air you can get constantly rising temps if it is incapable of handling the heatload. Even by your standards you will never find out what stable really is. Also what you call stable and what I call stable can be different. It's more a matter of opinion. I can run my rig at 4.3 Ghz and game all day and night on it, encode video on it, make a sandwich with it but it will fail Prime95 within 10 minutes.
Last edited by BeepBeep2; 05-23-2011 at 08:05 AM.
Smile
how reliable is cpuz with voltages? even if they are all off by a small amount, is it the same on all boards?
2500k @ 4900mhz - Asus Maxiums IV Gene Z - Swiftech Apogee LP
GTX 680 @ +170 (1267mhz) / +300 (3305mhz) - EK 680 FC EN/Acteal
Swiftech MCR320 Drive @ 1300rpms - 3x GT 1850s @ 1150rpms
XS Build Log for: My Latest Custom Case
I'm water cooled and running Prime95 right now and my temps slowly climbed to 59c and that's were they have stayed for the last ~30 mins or so.
I'm running Blend for an Hour after that I'm calling it a day, I'm not going to waste time running Prime95 for hours when I should be enjoying my computer![]()
I measured on my M4A79 Bios 3702 and for my 1100T the following:
Bios Set:1.5375Idle DMM:1.513Load DMM:1.523Idle Cpu-Z:1.534Load Cpu-Z:1.493
Other setting may have other δV. Cpu-Z is Version 1.57 x64
My DMM is a V&A VA18B, with fresh batteries.
Measuring point is on the back of the board, choke leg (as shown by CAL930 in this thread)
Last edited by felix_w; 05-23-2011 at 08:28 AM.
ASUS M4A89TD Pro/USB3 - LLC on
BIOS Set
1.40v
Idle -
CPU-Z 1.416v
DMM 1.419v
Load -
CPU-Z 1.428-1.440v
DMM 1.457v
DMM is an Extech MN35, measuring points are capacitor leads on 3rd phase from bottom...
Essentially if I went with the same method Daveburt went I could claim 1.4v when I'm actually close to 1.46 or even 1.44 according to CPU-Z (again, not to pick on him, just an example)
Last edited by BeepBeep2; 05-23-2011 at 08:38 AM.
Smile
Yes! Prime95 Blend for 1hr at 4.1Ghz with 1830Mhz RAM
Load Vcore of 1.488v
On previous BIOS it was 4.1 with 155v load Vcore with max temp of 70c
Will aim for 4.2Ghz tomorrow![]()
Oh particle btw:
I've had P95 Blend fail at 9 hours (went to sleep) before due to using box cooler and ram heating up from CPU heat![]()
2400 NB and 3600 CPU was obviously not the cause for a rounding error...and sticks do not fail much after 4 hour range, if it fails after 5 its because of heat build up.
There are way too many factors to define stable...
Smile
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