Re: OverClocking Asus P5WD2-E Premium & Intel D 805
- From: jeanfrancois.chapdelaine@xxxxxxxxx
- Date: 26 Jul 2006 12:50:54 -0700
Ok, thanks. I will try to work something out with that info.
Barry Watzman wrote:
Well, first, while I considered doing exactly what you did (except for
the heatsink), I decided that I would not buy a motherboard that was not
Core 2 Duo (Conroe) compatible. So I waited, because none of the Asus
P5WD2 boards are known to be Conroe compatible (the -DH model is, but
that is a new board that didn't exist until a couple of weeks ago).
Also, you got the wrong heatsink. The cooler to use is the Zalman
CNPS9500. No contest there, that is the one to use (for ANY socket 775
configuraiton in which CPU cooling is an issue, and certainly for all
overclocked processors).
As far as overclocking the 805, the 805's native mode is a 2.66GHz speed
with a physical clock of 133MHz and a [fixed] multiplier of 20 (the
133MHz physical clock is "quad pumped" inside the CPU to a 533MHz FSB
speed). The overclock that seems to work best with the 805 is a
physical clock of 180MHz, which gives 3.6GHz (the FSB is going to be
720MHz). While some of these CPUs can go above 3.6GHz, the minor
additional speed that you can reliably get just isn't worth the trouble
it takes to get there. Leave the voltages alone, at their default
values. Additional voltage is rarely required. The best memory to use
is 800MHz (PC2-6400) (which will actually be running at 720MHz), but by
adjusting the memory multipliers you may get other memory to work.
Based on some benchmarks that I saw, the Pentium D 805, overclocked to
3.6GHz, is within 1% of the very lowest speed Core 2 Duo (1.83GHz, I
believe) in terms of average overall performance. Admittedly, it only
costs about half as much. But the Conroe runs dramatically cooler (the
power dissipation is half that of a Pentium D), and this is the very
lowest end of the Conroe range, with the smallest cache. Clearly Conroe
(Core 2 Duo) is a dramatically superior processor family.
jeanfrancois.chapdelaine@xxxxxxxxx wrote:
Hi,
Like a lot of people, I got all exited after reading the following
article from tom's hardware:
http://www.tomshardware.com/2006/05/10/dual_41_ghz_cores/
I was about to buy a new computer when I read that article. So I
decided to buy about the same computer they used to make this article.
Asus P5WD2-E Premium
Intel Pentium D 805
OCZ DDR PC-4000 500MHz 2x512MB Dual Channel / Platinum Edition
COOLERMASTER REAL POWER 450W ATX 12V
ATI X850 XT Platinum Edition
2 X 250 GB Western Digital 16MB (RAID0)
And for the cooling I bough the nice Zalman RESERATOR 1 Plus.
So after building the computer I started by testing the stability of
the system at the default settings. It running very smooth and without
any problem even after 5 3DMark runs and a full night of torture test
from prime95.
So I started overclocking. I used prime95, PCProbe from asus and 3dmark
the newest version.
So finally, I realized that Reserator 1 plus is not as great as it
look. At 200 MHz 4.00 GHz the CPU temperature was at 95 C during the
3Dmark and the application crashed during the CPU test. With that
temperature, raising the VCORE voltage is not an option to gain
stability.
I tried at 190 MHz 3.80 GHz and the problem was still the same...
I then tried at 180 MHz 3.60 GHz. The temperature was not a problem
anymore at that frequency. But during the 3DMark, it was still crashing
at the CPU test. I decided to raise the VCORE voltage notch by notch.
But that did make any difference. The default VCORE for this CPU is
1.3375. I raised the VCORE up to 1.5 and it was still crashing. I then
tried to raise the Memory voltage. The default voltage for the memory
is 1.8. I tried up to 1.9 and it was still crashing.
So I decided to try at 170 MHz 3.40 GHz. It was still crashing during
the 3DMark test. I tried the same procedure with the Voltage once again
at that frequency. But the results were the same...
The system look very unstable to me...
But all the hardware I got in that box is recommended for high OC.
If anyone has any suggestion, I would strongly appreciate it.
Thanks in advance.
PS: sorry for my bad English, my first official language is French.
.
- References:
- OverClocking Asus P5WD2-E Premium & Intel D 805
- From: jeanfrancois . chapdelaine
- Re: OverClocking Asus P5WD2-E Premium & Intel D 805
- From: Barry Watzman
- OverClocking Asus P5WD2-E Premium & Intel D 805
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