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Do you overclock?

 
 
BuddyJ BuddyJ is offline
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      04-10-2009
Grats BetaMan. Keep it under 60C at full load. I shoot for in the low to mid 50s.
 
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BetaMan BetaMan is offline
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      04-11-2009
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Originally Posted by BuddyJ View Post
Grats BetaMan. Keep it under 60C at full load. I shoot for in the low to mid 50s.
Cool! Thanks!

EDIT
I got it at 3.0GhZ!!! Here are the shots.
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Do you overclock?-3ghz-.png   Do you overclock?-3ghztemp.png  

 

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Last edited by BetaMan; 04-11-2009 at 04:43 PM..
 
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For Vista For Vista is offline
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      04-11-2009
overclocking has always been a sensitive subject with me. Unless your running AMD processors or some "aftermarket" manufactured equipment, its really the only hardware that can take excessive stress.
 
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BuddyJ BuddyJ is offline
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      04-12-2009
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overclocking has always been a sensitive subject with me. Unless your running AMD processors or some "aftermarket" manufactured equipment, its really the only hardware that can take excessive stress.
That's not entirely true. You don't have to have "aftermarket" equipment, but it helps if you do. And the processor brand doesn't matter either. As long as there are options on the board or in the BIOS, and as long as you can keep temperatures and voltages at the right levels, there's no reason not to get the most performance you can out of your system.

The only people who shouldn't be overclocking are people who buy discount pre-assembled systems from big box stores. But once you begin to care about system performance, and can assemble your own rig, there's no reason not to. It's the easiest way to stretch your budget.
 
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Ian Ian is offline
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      04-13-2009
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overclocking has always been a sensitive subject with me. Unless your running AMD processors or some "aftermarket" manufactured equipment, its really the only hardware that can take excessive stress.
I've got an Intel Q6600 that runs at 3.0GHz no problem (from 2.4GHz)... I've even got it running at 3.4GHz at the moment but it's a little too hot, so I'll probably drop down a little.

For the price/performance ratio, an overclocked Q6600 was a bargain CPU when I bought it
 
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floater floater is offline
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      04-16-2009
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Unless your running AMD processors or some "aftermarket" manufactured equipment, its really the only hardware that can take excessive stress.
Yes, perhaps you need a better cooling solution. But to say AMD are the only ones that overclock well is simply not true. Some of the best overclockers at the moment, are Intel processors.

FWIW, many motherboards come with software overclocking now.
 
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Khaotic Khaotic is offline
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      04-19-2009
I totally overclock - hense the website: ClubOverclocker.com
I DO believe in water cooling - becuase I spend time and put great care into building a quality system and product. No leaks! I've been water cooling for YEARS and have even installed coolers into friends machines who want a quieter and cooler PC.

Overclocking is a HUGE hobby and with the current spread of motherboards available on the market today - its easier than ever. It's not just a dark art followed by a secret society anymore. Aside from the "PC IN A BOX" Vendors like Dell, most of the aftermarket motherboards you can buy these days allow overclocking. And with a little time in Google and a few select forums, a little bit of reading and the right Overclocking Coach can have you reaping higher clock speeds, better performance, and best of all - you pay next to NOTHING. Ok, so you may have to spend a few extra dollars on a new CPU cooler - becuase stock coolers are not efficient enough to bleed off the heat from overclocking.
Extra heat, becuase you are going faster! Once you read, you'll understand, Overclocking does not kill a processor. HEAT kills a processor. It's going to get hotter, becuase its going faster. If you manage that extra thermal energy properly, it won't harm your CPU. My experience with AMD is limited, but most "mainstream" model Intel CPUs will give you overclocks that exceed the stock clock speed of the next higher model. That means, you're saving a LOT of money.
Consider this $350 i7-920 CPU that is runing in excess of the clock stock speeds of the 965 which is priced at $1,000





Last edited by Khaotic; 04-19-2009 at 01:35 PM..
 
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whoosh whoosh is offline
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      04-19-2009
I have not really tried to overclock maybe its a vestage from the days of having only 4 meg of ram and an intel processor .
Will Follow the thread and see how you guys do with the overclocking then maybe put my foot in the water .
For me stability as always been the key criteria but if things look good am willing to have a go .

------------------- The foot in the water bit = bad choice of words

Nice rig Khaotic

Last edited by whoosh; 04-19-2009 at 04:04 PM..
 
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Ian Ian is offline
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      04-19-2009
Very nice work there Khaotic, that's a huge overclock! It might sound like a silly question, but what is the wooden block in the bottom right of the pic? Is that just supporting something, or is it a component?

I can totally understand water cooling if you are really in to the hardware and modding side of computers, as it's good fun to build something like that and make a good job of it. I used to really enjoy modding my old Lian-Li case and added a side window, LCD status display using the parallel port and a hard drive with transparent top (thanks to the use of a clean room and some perspex!).

Out of interest, how far do you think an air cooled i7 920 could go?
 
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whoosh whoosh is offline
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      04-19-2009
I may be speaking out of turn but it looks like the wood is surporting the pipes ?

Must admit it made me want to look into overclocking That is a nice rig
 
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