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Poll: Is Overclocking Relevant?

Is overclocking relevant?

  • Yes, its important to run my PC as fast as I can

    Votes: 194 36.5%
  • No, Noise ,heat and energy saving is more important

    Votes: 75 14.1%
  • A *balance* of the above to suit my personal needs

    Votes: 262 49.3%

  • Total voters
    531
I am absolutely loving the discussion between easyrider and Big.Wayne. Wayne rational as always, easy presumably drunk and far from rational. Comedy gold. :D

I know I'm a few days old with this one but it made properly made me laugh.

Easy, I don't know why you are getting so irate in this thread, you set up the poll in the first place purely to continue your (now multiple threaded) 'discussion' with Wayne. What did you expect?!

But thank you for doing it though, it's been the livliest this forum has been for a while!
 
I voted one, but you can have both these days, it's not like you need delta fans anymore and if you leave the power saving features enabled even the highly clocked systems don't use that much power these days, or even produce much heat or noise when at load.

My computer used to heat up room in the winter, not anymore it don't.
 
Easy, I don't know why you are getting so irate in this thread, you set up the poll in the first place purely to continue your (now multiple threaded) 'discussion' with Wayne. What did you expect?!

But thank you for doing it though, it's been the livliest this forum has been for a while!


Its my poll and I will cry if I want to ,cry if i want to ,cry if i want to, you

would cry too if it happened to you:p
 
nah I've seen saying this for a while now. When CPU's were single threaded it mattered a lot as it was important they completed their single tasks as quickly as possible

Now we have CPU's that are dual, quad and soon 6 cores and able to work on as many as 12 threads at a time it makes raw speed completely redundant for most PC's.
 
Overclocking has not been required on PC for at least 4+ years now. You get a couple of FPS more or your encodes are faster :rolleyes:

Neither are essential its more of a can do than must do PC sport if anything to see how much faster you can go vs the other guy!
 
Overclocking really was worth it back in the day of single cores, a t-bird and cheap amd rig would still struggle doing things like encoding, could take hours and hours to dooo something fairly simple. These days though clock speeds aren't hugely improved a far more complex encode takes far less time, and whack 4 cores on it and it becomes silly.

Its kind of similar at the moment to how internet went, you'd download a film at 56k, and want to shoot yourself, 17 weeks later it was done and a upgrade to your net connection meant you got things faster. But there was a point past which it became not over the top, just fast enough. You can now download pretty much a 1080p encode of something faster than you can watch them. Ok maybe not a 30gb bluray size file, but a very high quality 8-12gb encode of a film many people can download faster than the time it takes to watch the film. More speed would simply mean more time spent with the connection idle, rather than you being able to watch more, you can only watch so much film/tv/play games/spank it a day.

We're kind of at that point with cpu's. It used to be I might run an encode of something overnight so it didn't lag my computer down all day long, now I can run it while playing a game without seeing anything more than the slightest of slowdown that I really don't notice. If I run my quad at stock, 3Ghz, or 4Ghz, the difference is how much time my quad spends Idle once its done, not what else is it waiting to do.

I used to see a big difference with overclocking a low end chip and getting top end performance. Now I can't tell the difference in anything but benchmarks between stock and a 33% overclock.

But this is largely because the move from dual to quad was very quick and with consoles coming in the middle with limited/set hardware few games have moved beyond them just yet. For most of us the hardest thing we run is gaming and realistically any old dual/quad will feel identical to an overclocked 7Ghz i7.

These days I just tend to overclock as far as stock voltage will take me for a minor power hit but being able to keep all powersaving functions enabled for lower idle power usage. GPU's on the otherhand for gaming are still worth overclocking as we still have the situation where a cheaper gpu and making do aswell as overclocking the bejesus out of it gets you more value. You could just buy a 5970 and max out every game at 1920x1200 without overclocking, buta 5850 and overclocking it is just so much cheaper that I'd prefer to do that.

I think this is the basic issue, a decent dual core and a cheap quad core aren't priced £200 apart unlike a 5850/5970. A decent dual core at £50-60, or a great quad core at £120. CPU prices are so competitive with so little difference between the low end quads and top end quads even a budget quad is hugely powerful.
 
I would have taken the 3rd option, but it was not around when I voted

A *balance* of the above to suit my personal needs

yes I do believe so this would be best, for both performance and longevity of the system
 
I have voted for balance.

The Ocing for me is a must as I want the best bang for bucks.
But I also like to relax in a quiet room.
The benifits of Ocing is you can always put it back, and the tweaking is just plain fun:D
 
Latency or MHz that is the question.

Wayne has gone DEEP!

Care to explain to the masses wayne me old mucker?

You can notice nm's in latency and yet not 1ghz in clock speed?

I wish I had your senses dude :D

Cheers matey


easy :)
 
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Related article here - http://www.tomshardware.co.uk/core-i5-750-efficiency,review-31785.html

Hunting Down The Perfect Clock Speed For Core i5

3 GHz? 4 GHz? Not a problem! Pretty much all Core i5 and Core i7 models are capable of running at overclocked speeds, delivering stellar performance. You only need a suitable platform to sustain your overclocking ambitions. However, even such an efficient product as the Core i5/i7 will no longer be energy-friendly if clock speeds are tweaked to the extreme. We looked at the Core i5-750 and overclocked it (with Turbo Boost enabled, per your requests) to find the clock speed that delivers the most optimized performance per watt.
 
My vote is with the Yes get it running as fast as it can, if they underclock a good one because some in the batch where crap then I'm gonna get my Mhz back ;)
 
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