There are alot of other movies on their that are not of counterstrike:source, most of them are frag movies from original counterstrike and some from call of duty 2, I think it would be enjoyable to a gamer from any of those backrounds to watch some of these and get an idea of whats going on in...
If you enjoy playing games like counterstrike:source (of which I know alot of AT people do) I guess you could say its worth it which is why I addressed the thread to gamers..
+chance to win free thermaltake stuff
But hey more power to you if you aren't interested.
Edit: Yes a frag movie
I made a 2 minute short video to enter into a CEVO(professional online gaming league) movie contest sponsored by Thermaltake.
http://www.cevolved.com
You have to register and validate =(i know) but then you can download my movie Katalyst by Darin Williams (147mb) and check out all the...
That's a less than 10% increase so it is very acceptable especially with a Big Typhoon, and as long as your temperatures stay in check I would say to go 1.525 and see what you can get from there.
I was thinking about picking up a vf700-cu but since I have the space, need the better cooling and am not planning on going SLI, I might pick one of these up instead.
That is the what the memory divider is running at, if you set that to 200, your ram will be running at 260mHz as per your HTT, and a value of 166 would put you at 216mHz like it is now..
There is no setting for better "stability", that is just the divider you are currently using.
Might just be the chip's limit, even though they are the same stepping they aren't the exact same.
Try it in a different board but thats about all it seems you can do, looks like your at the limit to me, great overclock by the way on both chips though.
Try lowering your HT multiplier to 3x.
My week 36 or something E3 venice can barely pull out 2.55gHz but I need better cooling to actually run it there full time.
Use a divider, it is doubtfull that your RAM is the reason your board will not exceed 253 HTT, like I said before, decrease your HT multiplier to 3x and in addition use a memory divider.
Also start over using a basic overclocking guide, you're attempting way too many things at once...
If that is really the case and you're having to clear the CMOS to even get the computer to start, your overclocking methods are somewhat... lacking. Try reading a guide of some sort, and yes the easiest way to properly reset when the system will not post is to reset the CMOS.
You should trade me for my venice and let me overclock your 148.
Don't go over 1.50-1.55 volts on the chip, higher than that really won't get you much more speed and runs the risk of overvolting and dramatically shortening the chips life, the lower the better.
Use the A64 overclocking...
Well if you overclocked and voided the warranty(not sure on ASUS's policy here) and it damaged other parts they probably wouldn't even replace the motherboard. If it was under stock settings than maybe you had a defective part, either way consult your warranty.
any chance you could shed some steppings on us? thinking about selling from my venice for about $150 seeing as how newegg is pricing them at $190 and its a decent stepping to an opteron 146/8 depending on availability.
What are you thinking in terms of price? My venice cant get past 2.4 without 1.55volts and bottoms out at 2.6 with really unsafe voltage and I was thinking of going the opteron route or looking into a different chip.
I was testing my board's max HTT, i dropped the HT multiplier to 2.5X and went up in increments until windows wouldn't boot. Stopped at 395, I don't run the processor like that although I probably could.
Right now with the HT multplier at 4x and my HTT at 300 I run great with my HT bus over 1200.
I have done searches and alot of googling but never really got a good answer so I am wondering if increasing the HT and or chipset voltage will help me get past a wall I am currently at (283x9) on my E3 3000+ Venice.
I know for sure the board's HTT is not maxxed because I have booted it to...
Increase the voltage on your RAM, I had that exact error before I slowly increased it until it worked properly.
ALso I get alot of DirectX 9.0c errors with any 81.9x while playing COD2(great game) series drivers for my 6800 GT, rolling back to the 81.85's fixed that.
I am on stock voltage(1.4 volts) and cooling with my 3000+ E3 Venice and I hit 2.37 easily. As for a maximum voltage I wouldn't go past 1.55 volts, past that the results are very small and your temperatures could be in trouble.
If you're going high end, do NOT cheap out on powersupply.
http://www.newegg.com/Product/Product.asp?item=N82E16817703001
^^ worth the money with its efficiency and overall performance.
The bios on my Abit AN8-Ultra, CPU-Z, and A64 Tweaker all gave me those readings after i SPD'd in the bios. They have to be documented somewhere, try google if they seem high.
Why don't you do your research and find me a press release where nVidia states that its chipset not motherboards(because nVidia doesn't manufacture motherboards) supports all dual core processors and not be manufacture specific such as AMD or Intel.
Wait so a company screwed your friend over because he bought the wrong board for his chip? Sounds, looks, and feels like comsumer negligence if you ask me. You have to have to know what you are purchasing at least...
Delete.
Socket 939 has its advantages in that the pci-express graphics bus is much better than agp. Usually anyone who would opt for a socket 754 board almost 1 and a 1/2 years after its release is to keep their current agp video cards like my brother did. Most people would recomend socket 939 because...
This site uses cookies to help personalise content, tailor your experience and to keep you logged in if you register.
By continuing to use this site, you are consenting to our use of cookies.