Altering Voltages

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which way is best to do this?, mine are currently set to auto but think this is holding my o/c back on a PentuimD 935 :eek: iam getting a better chip soon but would like to see what i can get out of the 935, its at 3.55 now from 3.2, got a silverstone TJ06 case 2 gb of ram and an arctic pro7 cooler

forgot to say my mobo is a ecs NF650iSLIT-A
 
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Ah. Sorry, I really should have worked that out.

Find out what the voltage is currently set to on Auto and start there. Speedfan and Everest will tell you the current vcore in Windows. Depending on your boards vdoop, that reading will be a bit below what it's currently set to in BIOS. Add maybe 0.025-0.4v to the Speedfan/Everest reading and start from there, paying close attention to your temps as you go.
 
Cob said:
Ah. Sorry, I really should have worked that out.

Find out what the voltage is currently set to on Auto and start there. Speedfan and Everest will tell you the current vcore in Windows. Depending on your boards vdoop, that reading will be a bit below what it's currently set to in BIOS. Add maybe 0.025-0.4v to the Speedfan/Everest reading and start from there, paying close attention to your temps as you go.


cheers again fella :) ive got speedfan and cpuz installed anyway so thats a job out the window to start with, so start with the vcore yeah? what after that, just any in slight amounts? just looked at vcore readings on speedfan most thats hit while playing 2142 was 1.265
 
Actually I should have said 0.025-0.04v and not 0.025-0.4v. My typo was a tad more dangerous than yours :rolleyes:

1.265v is pretty low. You should have a fair bit left to play with. And your memory won't hold you back. Just keep your memory divider at 1:1 until you find your highest stable overclock.
 
Cob said:
Actually I should have said 0.025-0.04v and not 0.025-0.4v. My typo was a tad more dangerous than yours :rolleyes:

1.265v is pretty low. You should have a fair bit left to play with. And your memory won't hold you back. Just keep your memory divider at 1:1 until you find your highest stable overclock.


Thanks Cob your a top geezer :)
 
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