xxxalpinexxx80
New Member
with the ac on the temps of my quad gets to 28c : ), if i want it to be at 2.66 can i make that big of a jump and just keep it there, if i can jump to 2.66 can you guys tlel me all the things i should set it to
don't do it outside the bios, trust me. it's much better to do it in bios. and because we got the cheapest quad core, they put a locked multiplier, so you're stuck at 9. You'll realize the bad part about this as you're forced to only be allowed to raise the fsb, which raises voltages, which raises heat. the QX6700 or above is more expensive because intel knows that an unlocked multiplier is a HUGE selling point as people can raise their speed without creating more heat.
increasing multiplier with impact voltage requirements and thermal output also. The main advantage is to allow the user to keep ram in sync and prevent RAM limitations from capping the ocYou'll realize the bad part about this as you're forced to only be allowed to raise the fsb, which raises voltages, which raises heat. the QX6700 or above is more expensive because intel knows that an unlocked multiplier is a HUGE selling point as people can raise their speed without creating more heat.
don't you want to keep the fsb of the ram and cpu at a 1:1 ratio anyways?
No. The motherboard has RAM divider options for a reason.
A 1:1 RAM ratio will afford some extra speed simply because it will clock so high due to the fsb. But this and any other positive effects will surely never be felt, Only extremely RAM sensitive RAM benchmarking programs will show a difference.
In short, RAM dividers are an overclockers best friend.
running ram and cpu in sync will improve performance, and your right that it wont show up in everyday tasks (but then neither will your cpu overclock). But dont unplay the performance loss of running asynchronous mode it can be worth quite a few fsb points.
Dividers are essential to max out your cpu, and hold your ram in tow. But unlocked multiplier allow you to do both. You can run you cpu and ram in sync and both at higher/max OC potential. Also multiplier induced OC;s will prevent other onboards from flaking out.
Its never really worth paying for the priviledge of unlocked multipliers and the cost benefit is normally off.