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- Joined
- 4 Sep 2011
- Posts
- 596
Hey all, hope everyone is well.
Right then, this should be a laugh for you. I'm totally green when it comes to o'clocking and I have never really tried it (been scared to be honest and if you read on you'll see why).
My CPU is a Conroe E6700 2.66Ghz and Mobo is Foxconn P9657AA. Basically, I've been on here asking advice about whetehr or not I should take the jump to Sandy Bridge and an i5-2500k rig. Been looking at the MSI mobo's also, particulary the Z68 chipset. Think It's called the GD-65 revision 3 or something but anyway you get my point.
So, I decided in the end to hold out till new year and in the meantime I thought well my pc is 6 years old now and my Conroe has been running at stock ever since (stock Intel cooling btw), so why don't I try to o'clock it and see what benefits I get?
Big Mistake.........
Read a few guides and Googled "How to overclock e6700 on air" and I get bombarded with all sorts of answers. Well, I know what your thinking, what would you expect? I mean these are bloody good chips in my mind and I've heard they can get to 4Ghz with the right setup etc.
So, after a fair bit of reading I think I will have a crack at it and see how I get on. Restart system and straight into BIOS. Go to Foxconn Smooth o'clock settings and select Enable. Then, go to FSB and change from 266 to 300.
So, basically my multiplier is locked and can only go downwards so at 10.0x I'm thinking yeah I should be able to post at 3.0Ghz on air. Right?
Wrong. . .
Boots up and shows Foxconn splash screen. Then, screen goes blank and long beep for 3 seconds, pause, long beep for 3 seconds and then pause. Basically continues like that and I'm sat there not knowing what the hell to do
I force shutdown, pray that I can get back into BIOS (at this time I'm thinking I'm going to have to reset the CMOS and I have never done that in my life so wasn't so keen on that) and thank god it lets me back in.
Finally, I reset FSB back to 266, save and exit and then comp boots up fine. Go to CPU-Z and see my specs are all ok.
Yep, so that is my first experience of o'clocking. Really put me off but I imagine that if I want to do it then I'm going to have to get used to that long beep but trust me when I say this I didn't like it
Any advice on how to get it to post?
Surely it should boot at 3Ghz?
Thanks all and remember I'm very new to this sort of stuff.
Right then, this should be a laugh for you. I'm totally green when it comes to o'clocking and I have never really tried it (been scared to be honest and if you read on you'll see why).
My CPU is a Conroe E6700 2.66Ghz and Mobo is Foxconn P9657AA. Basically, I've been on here asking advice about whetehr or not I should take the jump to Sandy Bridge and an i5-2500k rig. Been looking at the MSI mobo's also, particulary the Z68 chipset. Think It's called the GD-65 revision 3 or something but anyway you get my point.
So, I decided in the end to hold out till new year and in the meantime I thought well my pc is 6 years old now and my Conroe has been running at stock ever since (stock Intel cooling btw), so why don't I try to o'clock it and see what benefits I get?
Big Mistake.........
Read a few guides and Googled "How to overclock e6700 on air" and I get bombarded with all sorts of answers. Well, I know what your thinking, what would you expect? I mean these are bloody good chips in my mind and I've heard they can get to 4Ghz with the right setup etc.
So, after a fair bit of reading I think I will have a crack at it and see how I get on. Restart system and straight into BIOS. Go to Foxconn Smooth o'clock settings and select Enable. Then, go to FSB and change from 266 to 300.
So, basically my multiplier is locked and can only go downwards so at 10.0x I'm thinking yeah I should be able to post at 3.0Ghz on air. Right?
Wrong. . .
Boots up and shows Foxconn splash screen. Then, screen goes blank and long beep for 3 seconds, pause, long beep for 3 seconds and then pause. Basically continues like that and I'm sat there not knowing what the hell to do

I force shutdown, pray that I can get back into BIOS (at this time I'm thinking I'm going to have to reset the CMOS and I have never done that in my life so wasn't so keen on that) and thank god it lets me back in.
Finally, I reset FSB back to 266, save and exit and then comp boots up fine. Go to CPU-Z and see my specs are all ok.
Yep, so that is my first experience of o'clocking. Really put me off but I imagine that if I want to do it then I'm going to have to get used to that long beep but trust me when I say this I didn't like it

Any advice on how to get it to post?
Surely it should boot at 3Ghz?
Thanks all and remember I'm very new to this sort of stuff.