Overclocking Athlon64 X2's.

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17 Oct 2002
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Hi all,

Is my DFI Lanparty Ultra-D up to the task of overclocking an Athlon64 X2 4400+, 4600+ or 4800+?

Which would be the CPU of choice for a reasonable hassle free overclock without the need for extreme cooling?

Ta!
 
It's the best board to use for any 939 overclock.

Any should be easy enough to overclock, the board can easily do 300HTT plus without even breaking a sweat.

The CPU will give way before the board does. Not to hot on the X2 chips, so just go with one with the most cache if you want the most performance.

edit: Xtreme cooling won't really be needed, but Opterons which are just better quality cores tend to clock easier and run stable on the same clocks with less volts. You can get dual core optys.
 
Mekrel said:
It's the best board to use for any 939 overclock.

edit: Xtreme cooling won't really be needed, but Opterons which are just better quality cores tend to clock easier and run stable on the same clocks with less volts. You can get dual core optys.

Yep, an Opteron 165 or 170 would probably clock quite nicely and would probably be cheaper than you can find the x2 4400 and 4800 for.
 
That's a great clocking board for any S939 chip. With X2s, probably your most sensible options are to go for the 3800, with 2x 512kb cache or the 4400, with 2x1mb cache. The others simply raise the stock fsb while keeping the cache the same, so it's a waste of money if you're going to be clocking, as you'll be going way above the stock clocks of the intermediate chips anyway. I don't think the intermediate chips clock as well as either of these either - this is certainly true of the 3800 v. 4200, anyway.

A dual core opty would do nicely too, though I don't know too much about clocking those.

Hope that helps.
 
Core2Duo = hassle free overclocking (2.4GHz to 3.4GHz sound alright to you?)+ stomps an A64 for gaming performance.
Of course, it means a complete revamp for you but if you're gonna do it, do it right.
 
s0ck said:
Core2Duo = hassle free overclocking (2.4GHz to 3.4GHz sound alright to you?)+ stomps an A64 for gaming performance.
Of course, it means a complete revamp for you but if you're gonna do it, do it right.

Can't be bothered. Don't want new ram, don't want a new motherboard. Buying a new CPU and graphics card and slotting them in suits me better and would result in, IMHO, greater performance.
 
Search the net for a cheap opty 165 or 170, a lot of members were posting on here the other week that they had got opty 165s for £110 from a competitor so they are out there for a good price!

And as already mentioned opterons clock better and run cooler as the stock voltage is a lot lower than the x2s therefore giving you more headroom

Pair one of these with your dfi and aim for 2.8/2.9 :D
 
It'll just force you to use 2T timings on your RAM instead of 1T, but other than that it won't make much difference.

Jokester
 
As already mentioned it will just prevent you running it at a 1T timing, but there are a fair few divider options on the dfi board i think so it shouldn't cause too many problems
 
weescott said:
Yes, the DFI board likes 2 sticks (closest to CPU IIRC) for the highest clocks.
Using the same colour always worked best from what I have seen.

One colour was better for tight timings, and the other colour seemed to perform higher frequencies. Can't remember which way around it was though.
 
[TW]Fox said:
Can't be bothered. Don't want new ram, don't want a new motherboard. Buying a new CPU and graphics card and slotting them in suits me better and would result in, IMHO, greater performance.

It may suit you better but it won't result in better performance. Incidentally, I had two sticks of 3200LL and they sold real quick in MM :p
 
s0ck said:
It may suit you better but it won't result in better performance.

Really?

So you'd say that a new motherboard, CPU and memory would be a better way to spend £400 to get better gaming performance, bearing in mind I'd need to retain my X850 XT PE, rather than my current plan of a 4400 or something and an 8800GTS?

Surely 4400+, 2Gb Corsair XMS DDR and 8800GTS = better gaming than an E6300, 2Gb of XMS DDR2 and an X850 XT?
 
The AMD upgrade will yield better performance. Especially once you've raised the CPU speed to take away any chanceo of bottlenecking that GTS (depending on resolution playing at).
 
[TW]Fox said:
Surely 4400+, 2Gb Corsair XMS DDR and 8800GTS = better gaming than an E6300, 2Gb of XMS DDR2 and an X850 XT?

your right fox, do what u want ,my opty 170 at 2.7ghz steams thru everything, also my 'old' 7900gtxs in sli floor anything thrown at them, so im staying put for the next gen cpu stuff 45nm core 2's probably with 4 cores clocked at 4ghz + **** see a nice increase, as good as core 2 is, anything above 1280x1024 res with all the bells n whistles on, the graphics becomes bottle neck, core 2 at 4ghz vs A64 at 2.2ghz at high res produces near similar frame rates in new games with the same modern card (oblivion/company heroes etc)
 
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