Apoptosis wrote:Chris,
Welcome to the forums and looks like you got a great setup that can easily hit the results shown in the article. For starters I suggest manually setting the memory timings to 5-5-5-15 and increasing the voltage up to 2.0-2.1V in the BIOS for the memory. You will have to increase the voltage a bunch to hit over 3.7GHz... I had to max all the voltages out on the board to hit 3.7GHz with stability.
Once you find the max on the processor you can start to lower memory timings to say 4-4-4-12 from 5-5-5-15 and see if it's still stable. It will take a few hours to do if you've done this before... Just remember to take baby steps.. Go for 3GHz first then ~3.2Ghz then ~3.4GHz and inch your way up and you'll do fine. If you go balls to the wall and crank everything up from the start then you won't have a good time. Pick a benchmark too like Cinebench 9.5 and run the multi-cpu test and watch the scores improve as the overclock gets higher.
Thanks for your quick reply. The spec of the memory I bought is:
- Package: Tenth Anniversary 240-pin DIMM
- Feature: DDR2 PC2-5300
- Configuration: 128Meg x 64
- DIMM Type: UNBUFFERED
- Error Checking: NON-ECC
- Speed: DDR2-667
- Voltage: 2.2V
- Memory Timings: 3-3-3-12
- Specs: DDR2 PC2-5300 • 3-3-3-12 • UNBUFFERED • NON-ECC • DDR2-667 • 2.2V • - 128Meg x 64
Looks like it already runs at 2.2v and the default timings are 3-3-3-12
so what would you do with this?