Originally posted by: taltamir
Originally posted by: SniperDaws
Originally posted by: jaredpace
nah, he went into his bios with the card clocked at stock speeds. He went to PCI-E frequency and changed it from 100 to 110. booted windows and ran 3dmark06.
Then he went back to bios and set the PCI-E back to 100mhz (which is default) ran 3dmark again, and got a lower score.
Correct
but i do have an auto setting for my PCIe would this make any diffrence.
i tried 110Hz with my card at 740/1850/975 and it locked up halfway through return to proxycon or whatever its called.
Going back to topic. This IS manually overclocked. He manually overclocked it on a P35 and it was unstable, and then he said the new drivers auto overclock it on a P35 mobo. It's not automatic if he goes into the bios, changes settings, and experiences crashes.
So it seems that it does not happen with a P35 motherboard. Only with an nvidia motherboard.
So an automatic overclock only when combining an nvidia mobo + video card that does not happen with intel mobo, and in fact, cannot be archived (Stably) with an intel mobo. And, which nvidia adventised as "link boost technology". [I conclude that this isn't a shady trick, but rather, a case where a feature was not taken into account by some reviewers.]
-What would have happen to Intel, if they added some auto overclocking to their chips ,say back in the P-4 days, so when benched ,up to the AMD's 64, they would looked better ? and those overclock's did not show during benchtesting .
-if you have the PCI-E locked at 100 it should stay that way. my two cents.
-It's more than a trick , if you use it to sell cards.
- when they come out with the overclocked cards will they turn that feature off, giving more head room to sell the cards at a higher price?