Overclocking GPU and CPU.

i cant find it, there's a column of stuff that starts with CPU core = 1.34 and then everything below is on Auto mode, i dont understand the other modes at all, so i was too chicken to alter them :D

the cpu core on 1.34 you cant alter it's just there for reference

this aint going to be easy !!!!! and it might not go above 4.4 anyway, because i've read this often
 
Ha it will. Erm. It should say CPU volts or something. Or core not sure. But it should give you a option of either fixed or something else. I was told to put it to fixed and then change it to what I wanted. It should be at auto if you haven't changed the Volts yet.
 
Ha it will. Erm. It should say CPU volts or something. Or core not sure. But it should give you a option of either fixed or something else. I was told to put it to fixed and then change it to what I wanted. It should be at auto if you haven't changed the Volts yet.

yes but without knowing for sure i'm not adjusting anything, because when you see the list, the CPU volts could be anyone of those.... and if you get it wrong it could screw up your pc.... i'll have another look on the other forums
 
yes but without knowing for sure i'm not adjusting anything, because when you see the list, the CPU volts could be anyone of those.... and if you get it wrong it could screw up your pc.... i'll have another look on the other forums

120504024808.jpg


CPU voltage is clearly stated as CPU voltage...
 
your software is nothing like mine :D i'm EXT 4 GEN 3, i think to go to 4.6 you have to set it manually, with the instant OC features turned off
 
i downloaded Asrock AXTU but i should already have that, but i didn't, anyway it has all the CPU volts.... but i still dont know what to do :)

it has voltage offset... draw vol, vtt volts etc, it's fairly obvious that i have to increase the core voltage, but it's which one and what else, this info is damn hard to find online, because these figures are available yes, but they chat to each other as guys that already know how to OC.... or it refers to another cpu or Asrock

i need to find someone that's oc to 4.6 and has the bios photos online so i can download and compare to mine, but if they say adjust this, adjust that then i think WTF, where is this stuff ! :D

auto crashes on 4.6 and it does for many others online too, because of this we have to do it manually.... we're probably on the wrong forum to find this info out
 
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I don't usually make a habit of bumping things, but any help on this one guys?

UEFI is now the latest but the random BSOD issue still persists. I don't know where I'm going wrong.




I'm going to try putting the vcore on Auto and see what it does for now. So far I have gathered some information from elsewhere, and hope it may serve me and any others out there just as well -

For Asrock Mobo's
Turbo Boost Power - Manual
Short Duration Power Limit - 300
Long Duration Power Limit - 300
Core current Limit - 300


For the ASRock 1155 boards, 5 is the lowest LLC setting. You will probably want it to be at 2 or 3 if you're overclocking. Don't set it to 1 because that will cause spikes in your voltage which is dangerous.

Definitely take that voltage off auto! You can do much better with fixed/offset.

The "Long Duration Maintained (Sec)" setting is how long in seconds before the TDP limit kicks in and the CPU is throttled down.
So if I have a higher Turbo Power Limit, it will be unlikely to get to a situation where the above setting needs to kick in and take effect.

I had to turn on Intel SpeedStep, and increase the Long Duration Power Limit from 95W to 110W. With this, I hit 4.6GHz and 4.7GHz (hitting 73 ºC, and reducing to 4.6GHz so I increased the power to 120W)

Fixed Mode: Your CPU will run full voltage and speed all the time, even when idling.
Enhanced Halt State (C1E): Enabled
CPU C3 State Support: Enabled
CPU C6 State Support: Enabled
Package C State Support: Auto

- Turn on Intel SpeedStep
- If using 'turbo mode' then -
Turbo Boost Power = Manual and set all 'limits' to 300, and then dial back incrementally until load testing goes unstable (may not do anything above a certain point)

- Turbo mode may be disabled for better results to prevent multiplier auto-switching inside OS if it is an issue
- Try 1.365 Vcore + for 4.6GHz
- PLL Overvoltage enabled and set at 1.7V
- RAM at X.M.P.
- Try LLC of 2 or 3 (lower numbers equal stonger LLC effect and vice versa)
- Run at 'Fixed Mode' and disable all 'C-States'
- VCCSA should be set to Auto
- 85 degrees max when load testing
- Select CPU PLL Overvoltage to enabled, this allows most people to go beyond 4.8 or 5.2 GHz whatever your barrier is. If you have a D1 stepping processor, enabling this option will cause you to fail to boot. (Refer to CPU-Z)
- All fans as high as possible


BSOD Codes
0x124 = add/remove vcore or QPI/VTT voltage (usually Vcore, once it was QPI/VTT)
0x101 = add more vcore
0x50 = RAM timings/Frequency add DDR3 voltage or add QPI/VTT
0x1E = add more vcore
0x3B = add more vcore
0xD1 = add QPI/VTT voltage
“0x9C = QPI/VTT most likely, but increasing vcore has helped in some instances”
0X109 = add DDR3 voltage
0x0A = add QPI/VTT voltage


VCC/VCCIO/CPUIO
It's CPU Input/Output (IO voltage terminals. This voltage work just like QPI/VVT/IMC and the default voltage is
1.05v but it needs to keep within 1.10 - 1.20v when your overclock beyond 4GHz, increasing this voltage also help
to improve the stability when 4 memory DIMMs occupied and its max speed (2133MHz). This high voltage
doesn't seem to affect overclocking.

PCH Voltage - Platform Control Hub
The default value is 1.05v and no need to change this voltage because it doesn't contribute to any overclock capability
therefore keeps it at default setting.


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01-31-2012 07:35 AM #3
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I have a Beta UEFI for the board you can try for starters; Clicky. This UEFI is date stamped newer than official 1.7. Increase your power and current limits to 250, set LLC to level 1 (level 1 is less aggressive than it was on the P67), set BCLK to 100.1, leave IGPU voltage at auto, increase CPU PLL to 1.857v, increase VTT to 1.155v, increasing VCCSA to 1v might help as well. You should now be good to go. Do remember only roughly 35-40% of CPUs will be able to handle 4.6GHz+ completely stable so worst case scenario go for 4.5GHz. Don't worry about the temps the UEFI reports too much, AFAIK the UEFI reports actual core temp, where other apps report the IHS surface temp. Install the AXTU software and you will see that even reports the same temps as things like realtemp or coretemp will

You should also be sure you are running with the latest drivers, I haven't got a link for them yet I'm still rebuilding all my archives and directory trees after the FBI being complete retards and just killing the entire megaupload site.

i'll keep this for reference use and maybe attempt this tomorrow
 
i can just about understand it, but it needs printing off before i can go through it, it's quite a few adjustments and it probably wont work anyway

you can understand what i was saying though, these lot know all about OCing all ready, i have to find out on what pages all this stuff is on.
 
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If I'm honest until I got my IB I had 0 knowledge of OC'ing. I just learn very quickly when it comes to technical things. I read up a lot on SB and IB pre IB release before I even bought my rig and as such learnt a lot about how to OC etc. It's really not that hard. Anything after a Z68/P67 chipset is easy as cake to OC (that is setting wise compared to skt775 BIOS' etc)
 
If I'm honest until I got my IB I had 0 knowledge of OC'ing. I just learn very quickly when it comes to technical things. I read up a lot on SB and IB pre IB release before I even bought my rig and as such learnt a lot about how to OC etc. It's really not that hard. Anything after a Z68/P67 chipset is easy as cake to OC (that is setting wise compared to skt775 BIOS' etc)

Yeah it was ridiculously easy after you explained it to me ;)
 
If I'm honest until I got my IB I had 0 knowledge of OC'ing. I just learn very quickly when it comes to technical things. I read up a lot on SB and IB pre IB release before I even bought my rig and as such learnt a lot about how to OC etc. It's really not that hard. Anything after a Z68/P67 chipset is easy as cake to OC (that is setting wise compared to skt775 BIOS' etc)

Hmm, looks a lot harder than 775 TBH. I guess it's easier to get a good 4.5Ghz OC, but much more difficult to push it further to 4.8Ghz when you have to adjust things like PLL as well.
 
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