First OC build - please review what i've done and comment on improvements

Associate
Joined
28 Oct 2010
Posts
4
(note: I mistakenly posted this in the wrong section previously - have asked for the other posting to be removed)


Hi folks,
I've just put together my next machine, and decided to give overclocking a go for the first time, just to see what'd happen!

I'd be interested in any comments on my approach, or on my settings - especially whether there is anything i could change that would relatively safely let me take it further, or if I’ve made any mistakes. I've also a few questions as you'll see...

OK, so after a lot of reading around my approach was two fold - first of all see what I can get whilst keeping the temperature to around 70 degrees under a burn-in test (I picked 70 degrees based on comments from various places on the net) and I decided to keep the turbo mode enabled, so that I’d get a max on the speed when necessary, but then when the CPU is not so heavily loaded it could run at a slightly lower speed, and therefore be a little cooler.

First of all the machine specification:

CPU - Intel i7 950
Cooling - Corsair H70 Hydro Series CPU Cooler (mounted as exhaust not as recommended as an intake)
Motherboard - Gigabyte GA-X58A-UD3R Rev 2
Memory - Corsair TwinX 4GB DDR3 1333 (2x2Gb in dual configuration)
PSU - 1000W Coolermaster Silent Pro M, Modular Power Supply
GPU - SLI - 2x Point of View GTX 470 TGT Ultra Charged (3500MHz GDDR5, GPU 680MHz, Shader 1360MHz) (Std 3348MHz GDDR5, GPU 607MHz, Shader 1215MHz)

The settings I've come up with are:

BCLK = 165 at standard 23x/24x multiplier (giving approx 3.8GHz to 4GHz turbo) (reported max speed=3961.09)
VCPU=1.25v (monitoring actual 1.232v)
Memory=9-9-9-24 (I have configured the memory as per the settings on the actual sticks)
VDRAM=1.58v (monitoring actual 1.568v)
QPI Speed=5.94GHz (multipler is set to auto and defaulting to 36x which is the smallest available)
Memory speed=1320 (8x)
Uncore speed=3300 (20x)
HT is enabled
EIST is enabled
Intel turbo boost tech is enabled

These setting run various benchmarking and burn in tools stably with the following temps and results:

Prime95 - 65-70 degree max core temp
Intelliburn test v2.4 - 69 degree max core temp
3d Mark Vantage - score=34,383 CPU=58,834 GPU=30,200 max temp=64 degrees
3d Mark06 - score=26,316 SM2=9,663 SM3=13,588 CPU=6,854 max temp=61 degrees


Other things I've not done yet because I had questions:

I’ve read about is disabling C1E but haven't done this yet as I'm not sure why it would be good to disable a power save function?

I've upped BCLK and not decreased the multiplier - I’ve read this as an alternate approach i.e. lower multiplier and increase BCLK - why is this better?

One final question which has me confused is I’ve been reading about the different temperature sensors (tJuntion/tCase etc). And something I’ve noticed is that (as expected) the core temperatures vary based upon processor loading, idling in the 30's, when loaded as above. However I’ve noticed the CPU sensor stays in the 60s irrespective of loading and i'm unsure why that would be? I read somewhere saying there should be a 5 degree gradient difference between the two, but think I’ve clearly misunderstood something. if anyone can point me to a better description of these I’d be grateful.

I’m running dual channel DDR3 as I had it from my prior machine – will I really see any performance difference in replacing it with triple?

I tried taking the BCLK up another 2 notches (167 rather than 165) to just get it over the 4GHz barrier and found that whilst it would boot, within seconds of starting Intelliburn or Prime it would BSOD. I pushed vcore up 2 notches (from 1.25v to 1.2625v) and this stabilized it for Intelliburn which completed successfully, however Prime still BSOD’s, albeit after about 6 minutes. I was considering putting vcore up a little more as its still pretty low at this point compared to the max specification (I believe this is 1.375?) however the temperatures had jumped by 5-10 degrees and idle and load already so held off. Is there something else I should have looked at?

Last question! Will how much difference does the case make in lowering overall temperatures? I've an Akasa Eclipse 62 case now, which ii'd think is reasonable, but only has one fan in and the H70 out.

Thanks for any comments!
Nick
 
WOW LOTS OF QUESTIONS :)

Its looking good mate temps are decent and you have a good overclock.

I’ve read about is disabling C1E but haven't done this yet as I'm not sure why it would be good to disable a power save function?

At higher overclocks people tend to turn this off as it can cause instability if your PC is running fine leave it on.

I've upped BCLK and not decreased the multiplier - I’ve read this as an alternate approach i.e. lower multiplier and increase BCLK - why is this better?

People with expensive high end boards can get a high BLK from there mobos so its sometimes beneficial to use the BLK method (the 920 had a lower multiplier) there is also a chance that by using different variations of blk/multi you can get a higher clock. Ive also found (i dont know why?) that different settings hitting the same overclock can cause different CPU temps.

One final question which has me confused is I’ve been reading about the different temperature sensors (tJuntion/tCase etc).*snip*?

With the I7s you are interested in the core temps (tjunction) rather than the case temp (tcase) coretemp/realtemp/hwmonitor can be used to see this.

I’m running dual channel DDR3 as I had it from my prior machine – will I really see any performance difference in replacing it with triple?

There was a discussion on here about that and it didn't make a lot of difference, but for the price of a tripple channel kit (-the price you could sell yours for) you might as well get some.

Last question! Will how much difference does the case make in lowering overall temperatures? I've an Akasa Eclipse 62 case now, which ii'd think is reasonable, but only has one fan in and the H70 out.

Airflow can make a massive difference to temps, the reason the h70 is supposed to be sucking in is to get cool air past your RAD at the moment it is sucking all the hot air out of your case. (I haven't used the prebuilt WC or your case so cant give any specifics)

So far you have a great OC and decent temps, you can either be happy or keep pushing!!! If i was you i would be happy and use your PC for a couple of months you have a great set up....then when you are up for staring at bluescreens give it a play with, you seem to have got the jist of it and as long as you are not silly with the voltages you will not break anything.

Good luck mate!

sayso
 
Thanks for the feedback and comments - much appreciated.

I think I may well do what you said ... until i get the urge to tinker again (probably about a week!).

I replaced the case last night and its made a big difference - 5-10 degrees on the CPU and a few degrees on the graphics cards (enough so the fans dont scream so often). So that was definately worthwhile.

.. and this case has the holes/vents etc to support proper watercooling :)
thanks again
Nick
 
Back
Top Bottom