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overclocking error?

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  • overclocking error?

    well I just got my G400(Cya ATI!)and it seems
    to work pretty good...Now my P3-450 is already at 504MHZ but I wanted to try it at
    124FSB(558)...installed fan onto heatsink of
    video card and positioned another one right
    at the card itself...have factory fan/heatsink on processor and of course one
    in front(intake)and one out back(exhaust)
    Q2 timedemo ran ok but when trying 3DMark
    it kicked me back to desktop...tried GP500
    demo...same thing...now is this a video card thing or is it sumthing else?...I'm familiar
    with the Bios so if anyone has any suggestions I'd appreciate it...Thanx!
    Caprice
    P3-450 o/c 558
    Abit BH6
    128 PC100
    G400 SH 32M o/c MAX spex
    SB Live X-Gamer
    Pioneer 6X DVD
    Maxtor 10 Gig H.D.
    Fujitsu 13 Gig H.D.
    Win98 SE
    Samsung Synchmaster 17"
    Logitech C/L Mouse/Kybrd
    Altec Lansing ACS56
    oh yea! and a 3M Precise
    Mouse pad!!

  • #2
    sorry...almost forgot system spex....
    P3-450@504Mhz(for now!?)
    BH6 mobo
    128 PC100
    SB Live! Value
    G400 single head OEM
    (o/c at 150/200 but did clock it back when o/c computer)
    Maxtor 10.2 7200RPM
    Fujitsu 13.6 5400RPM
    Pioneer 6x DVD
    Winblows 98SE

    P.S.what is the actual clock speed of this G400? Thanx for any replies!


    P3-450 o/c 558
    Abit BH6
    128 PC100
    G400 SH 32M o/c MAX spex
    SB Live X-Gamer
    Pioneer 6X DVD
    Maxtor 10 Gig H.D.
    Fujitsu 13 Gig H.D.
    Win98 SE
    Samsung Synchmaster 17"
    Logitech C/L Mouse/Kybrd
    Altec Lansing ACS56
    oh yea! and a 3M Precise
    Mouse pad!!

    Comment


    • #3
      The vanilla G400 runs its core at 125MHz and its memory at 150MHz, if I'm not mistaken. The AGP interface speed should be set to 2/3 of your FSB. Make sure that you are not using the 1/1 divisor with that FSB speed.

      With overclocking, it could be anything. It could be that your CPU can't handle it, your chipset couldn't handle it, video card couldn't handle it, etc.

      One thing that you might try is forcing agp 1x. Download the PD 5 registry hacks from the MURC utility downloads and install the one named forceagp1x.reg, and reboot for it to take effect. There really is very minor differences between agp1x and agp2x with today's games, and it could be just the extra stability you need to have your system nicely overclocked.

      Comment


      • #4
        Hi Caprice,

        You may have to increase the CPU voltage a bit. It sounds like your there but need a bit more voltage to keep it running through the more taxing applications.

        Paul




        [This message has been edited by ALBPM (edited 22 January 2000).]
        "Never interfere with the enemy when he is in the process of destroying himself"

        Comment


        • #5
          well ALBPM...that was it!...upped the voltage
          to 2.10 and its stable...ran 3DMark2000 for
          30 minutes and played KP online for an hour
          and smooth as silk...no crashes!...will try
          2.05 later this week to see if it will run
          at that setting...the lower the better right?
          thanx again...Cya

          [This message has been edited by Caprice (edited 22 January 2000).]
          P3-450 o/c 558
          Abit BH6
          128 PC100
          G400 SH 32M o/c MAX spex
          SB Live X-Gamer
          Pioneer 6X DVD
          Maxtor 10 Gig H.D.
          Fujitsu 13 Gig H.D.
          Win98 SE
          Samsung Synchmaster 17"
          Logitech C/L Mouse/Kybrd
          Altec Lansing ACS56
          oh yea! and a 3M Precise
          Mouse pad!!

          Comment


          • #6
            Voltages and chips these days are strange beasts. "The lower the better?" Well, maybe, but then again, maybe not.

            One of the parts my company is working on now is spec'd to be a 3.3V part. Unfortunately, it does not work above 2.2V. Silicon does interesting things throughout the whole spread of temperature and voltage.

            You're probably a little better off by running at 2.05V vs 2.10V. In the long run, though, it probably is not going to make any difference. You're probably going to upgrade within 3 years, and that is *way* before the detrimental affects of higher voltage start to kick in.

            Glad things are working for ya!

            Comment


            • #7
              Thunderchez is right on. However, if 2.05 runs as stable as 2.10, go for it. Less power--> less heat. Less heat is better for your system overall, at least 99.99995% of the time.
              Gigabyte P35-DS3L with a Q6600, 2GB Kingston HyperX (after *3* bad pairs of Crucial Ballistix 1066), Galaxy 8800GT 512MB, SB X-Fi, some drives, and a Dell 2005fpw. Running WinXP.

              Comment

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