NomNom
Executive Member
NomNom:
The only ones you really need to set for a mild overclock are:
1) the CPU voltage
2) FSB
3) memory multiplier
The rest you can leave on auto.
Ok thank you will give it a try tomorrow.
South Africa’s biggest forum. Discuss, discover, and connect with thousands of members.
NomNom:
The only ones you really need to set for a mild overclock are:
1) the CPU voltage
2) FSB
3) memory multiplier
The rest you can leave on auto.
Well what does it have as a base clock? I'm not very familiar with Intel tech.No FSB on 760 i5s.
If HavocXphere really wants us to be technically correct, then we should've said "BLCK" (base clock) instead of "FSB" (front-side bus)Well what does it have as a base clock? I'm not very familiar with Intel tech.
Why is the temp so high? BIOS is essentially idle so it shouldnt be that high there.
Yup. Thats because most of the power saving features are usually (if not always) turned off while you're in the BIOS, such as C-states and Intel Speed Step.This is a common misconception, the CPU is not idle in the BIOS. You will almost always have higher temps in the BIOS than when idling in Windows
So whats it doing then? Aside from a couple of screen updates there is nothing to do.This is a common misconception, the CPU is not idle in the BIOS. You will almost always have higher temps in the BIOS than when idling in Windows
Ah that makes more sense.Yup. Thats because most of the power saving features are usually (if not always) turned off while you're in the BIOS, such as C-states and Intel Speed Step.
I think there's some confusion here. When some talk of auto it's the normal values chosen by the BIOS as specified by the hardware. This is what I call manual (that you can adjust) with some BIOS auto overclocking having an auto option that adjust values. It seems your BIOS just specifies these values as auto and doesn't show what they actually are. Just turn off the auto overclock and enter a manual setting for the CPU.For this I am able to change IMC Voltage and DRAM Voltage to Auto, why can't I just do that? Why do I have to manually put in the values? This is the "Crazy 3.36G" option that my motherboard provides for the CPU boost.
I tried this last night and it worked ok, the temp did increase about 5 degrees but that's to be expected, I am yet to run a Intel burn test on it though.
lol windows just uses a NOP in a loop. Uses less power but not exactly a non-instruction. To have it actually idling in windows you have to use a program like Rain to replace it with the HLT instruction.This is a common misconception, the CPU is not idle in the BIOS. You will almost always have higher temps in the BIOS than when idling in Windows
Some of the newer BIOS has the cool option of not just setting the CPU voltage on Manual/Auto, but they also have an offset option, which is very handy when you want to use EIST and overclock at the same time, because then you can reduce your power consumption since the voltage won't be fixed at say 1.25V even when the CPU is idling.