Intel Overclocking Guide

skunksmash

im coming for cake
Vista Guru
Gold Member
What is overclocking?

Firstly, it is currently the mostly widely used word that does not appear in the English dictionary......
Secondly, it is operating hardware (particularly CPU, RAM, motherboard, and video card) above and beyond rated specs. Rated specs are the level to which a particular piece of hardware is expected to, has been tested to, and is warranted to perform. What this equates to in the real world is a certain price tag for a certain level of expected performance....
Overclockers strive to determine not what hardware should do, but what can do.

Overclocking is more of an art than a science.
There is no combination of settings that will yield the best results for every system......
Greater experience does make the overclocking process less cumbersome, but it is and always will be a trial and error process.....
Don't be afraid to experiment, but always take things slow and be aware of temperature and voltage limits.

Overclocking Basics (particular to Intel systems, though many of the concepts apply to AMD systems as well)

1) Limitations - Each hardware component has physical limitations that, at a minimum, meet the rated (stock) specifications.....
In the process of thoroughly overclocking a system, the actual limitations of various components will be found. In general, the CPU, RAM, and motherboard will control the overclock, but other components such as the PSU and cooling will have a major impact on overclocking abilities.....
Depending on which of the three primary components (CPU, RAM, and mobo) is the first to reach its limits, different steps can be taken to squeeze more out of the other components. Video card overclocking is generally independent of overclocking the components previously listed.

2) Overclocking in the BIOS vs. overclocking software - Whenever the option exists, manipulating BIOS settings is the best way to accomplish overclocking.....
BIOSes on value/low end motherboards and on proprietary systems such as Dells and HPs generally have few to no options available for overclocking.......
On such systems, there is the potential to overclock through software, though there is not a single piece of software to overclock every board.

3) CPU FSB vs. external clock speed - Intel overclocking is achieved via the front side bus or system bus. Depending on your system, it can be noted as FSB, CPU frequency, CPU speed, clock speed, or something similar in the BIOS. Intel CPUs more recent than Pentium 3s are “quad pumped”......
This means that the external clock speed (the value shown in the BIOS) is one fourth the FSB, i.e. external clock speed = FSB/4.

4) DDR frequency vs. external clock speed - Conversely, DDR RAM transmits data on both sides of a tactical signal, effectively performing two functions per single clock cycle (i.e. DDR frequency = 2 x external clock speed)....
That is why it’s referred to as Double Data Rate RAM....
The discussion of RAM applies equally to DDR, DDR2, and DDR3. There are a variety of ways this is displayed in the BIOS; some display the DDR frequency and other show it as a ratio of the CPU:RAM, which will be discussed below...

5) Dividers - The ratio of CPU:RAM is known as a divider. On older Intel systems, best performance is achieved through highest possible stable operation in synchronous (1:1) CPU:RAM operation...
On such systems, the higher the FSB, the better performance. Newer Intel systems can benefit from a divider that favors the RAM (e.g. 3:4 which means the RAM runs as 4/3 the external clock speed - the CPU always operates at the external clock speed)...
It is generally best to start with a 1:1 divider and then test other dividers for potentially greater performance.

6) Multipliers - The multiplier is the ratio of external clock speed to processor frequency, i.e. external clock speed x multiplier = processor frequency.....
Older Intel CPUs had a locked multiplier, most current Intel CPUs have a multiplier that can be adjusted downward, and most Extreme Edition CPUs have multipliers that can be both lowered and raised...
CPUs tend to have a maximum frequency, which can be achieved through whatever combination's of external clock speed and multiplier that are available (e.g. if a CPU can handle 3.6 GHz, it can do so equally at 400x9, 450x8, and 600x6)...
Manipulating the multiplier permits fine tuning of CPU settings in relation to the RAM and mobo settings.

7) RAM Timings - All RAM has a series of latencies, generally referred to as timings....
Smaller numbers are faster or "tighter" while larger numbers are slower or "looser"...
As RAM is overclocked, it is necessary to apply looser timings, and conversely, RAM can often be run at tighter timings by either running it below stock speed or by increasing the voltage.

8) Voltages - Different components of the system receive different amount of voltage, and it is generally necessary to increase voltages as frequencies are increased beyond stock speeds...
The three most commonly tweaked are vcore (CPU voltage), vdimm (RAM voltage), and vMCH (Northbridge/memory controller). Excessive voltage can shorten the life of component or cause failure.

9) Temperatures and cooling - Quality cooling is essential to achieving and maintaining a good overclock...
The temperature of various components should be monitored to ensure that they are being sufficiently cooled...
CPU cooling receives the most attention. The stock cooler that comes with most retail CPUs is generally not suitable for overclocking. There is a wide variety of aftermarket air coolers that provide a correspondingly wide degree of cooling...
Water cooling is a popular, though more expensive, way of cooling components (generally limited to CPUs and video cards, though there are water blocks available for many types of components)...
Extreme cooling options such as phase change are also available. In general, the cooler the component, the further it will overclock. Installing an aftermarket cooling on the Northbridge is common for moderate to high overclocks...
There are also aftermarket coolers for Southbridges and RAM, though those components do not often require additional cooling in most systems or sufficient additional cooling can be provided by placing a fan to blow across the component.

10) Steppings, batches, weeks - Intel occasionally makes a large update to a processor line, and it shows as a new stepping. Processors can often be identified by batches or weeks as well. This information can often be used to give a general prediction of overclocking potential, though it is not a guarantee...
There are good overclocking processors that come out of "bad" weeks/batches and poor overclockers that come out of "good" ones...
The odds of getting a good overclocker from a "good" week/batch is simply greater than from a "bad" one.

11) CMOS Jumper - Unstable overclocking settings can cause a system to freeze and/or not boot...
Should rebooting not reset the system, stock settings can be restored by manipulating the CMOS jumper. Some motherboard have a CMOS reset button, and some have BIOS features to automatically prevent lock ups due to unstable overclocking settings.

BIOS 101

The BIOS on most boards can be accessed by pressing the DEL key at system startup...
It is safe to browse through the BIOS options, and it is important to be familiar with the various options...
BIOS options and terminology will vary from motherboard to motherboard, though the same basic options are available on all boards that can be overclocked (along with a host of advanced options).

BIOS menus are navigated with a keyboard...
The arrow and Enter keys are used to browse and select menus and options...
The ESC key accesses higher level menus, and when hit from the main menu, it will exit the BIOS (first prompting if the user wants to abandon changes and exit). The F10 key generally prompts the user to save changes and exit.

Before tweaking settings that directly affect overclocking, there are some standard settings that affect stability that should be set. They may not appear exactly as listed, but it will be something similar.
  • Spread Spectrum = disabled
  • PCI/AGP/PCIe = fixed, locked, or 33/66/100 (It is essential to lock the PCI and AGP frequencies, though some systems may benefit from a slightly raised PCIe frequency)
  • Stop unused PCI clock = enabled
  • Legacy USB = disabled
Furthermore, ensure that the Initial Display Adapter is set accordingly (i.e. PCI, AGP, or PCIe, depending on the video card’s interface)...
It is also a good idea to disable any unused features (e.g. serial port, parallel port, onboard audio, etc.) as this will free up resources.

Finally, any option relating to CPU frequency, RAM frequency, RAM timings, or voltages should generally be set to manual.

Overclocking Process

As stated above, overclocking is an art. Juggling the various settings can seem overwhelming initially, and it's often difficult to fight the urge to raise an overclock quickly...
It is very important to be patient and take baby steps while making adjustments.

In general, the overclocking procedure is -
  1. Increase the external clock speed by a small amount.
  2. Exit BIOS and boot to operating system.
  3. Test for stability and monitor temperatures.
  4. Return to BIOS, tweak settings, and repeat process.
In greater detail -

1) Baby steps - Increase the external clock speed in small increments. "Small" is relative to the stock speed of the system, though 3-5 MHz is common for Pentiums while 5-10 MHz is common for newer CPUs...
These numbers can be responsibly tweaked for a variety of reasons including personal experience and knowledge that a particular CPU stepping/week/batch is a good/bad overclocker. The steps can also be larger early in the overclocking process and smaller as the system gets closer to its limits...
The important thing is to not take too large of a step as too many other variables can change if large jumps are made.

2) Boot up - Be sure to save your settings before rebooting. Some motherboards offer overclocking profiles, which can save settings after a CMOS reset or even a BIOS flash...
Unsuccessful boots are not uncommon either...
Return to step 1 and lower the external clock speed or jump to step 4 for other tweaks.

3) Stability testing - There are a variety of stability testing programs available, and they should be employed frequently during the course of overclocking...
The extent of stability testing is up to individual preference, and there are a wide variety of philosophies concerning testing. It is generally a good idea to do at least a brief test at every step with a more thorough test every few steps...
Some quality testing programs are -
  • Super-Pi - Good for quick tests and benchmarking. This program will not provide robust stability testing.
  • Prime 95 and Orthos - These programs provide thorough testing, and some versions work automatically on multiple core processors.
  • OCCT - Another thorough stress testing program.
  • Memtest86 - An excellent RAM testing program. Great for ruling out or identifying the RAM settings as an issue.
A brief test with one of these programs might be for several minutes to an hour with a thorough test ranging from several hours to a full day...
Be sure to monitor temperatures when stress testing.

4) Return to BIOS and tweak - If stability testing was successful, return to step 1 and further increase the external clock speed...
If the system booted but did not test stable, there are several settings which may help. They include -
  • Adjust vcore - Increase the vcore one notch and repeat the testing. If more than two notches are required, try adjusting another setting.
  • Adjust RAM timings and vdimm - If a bit of vcore doesn't do the trick or Memtest86 identified the RAM as the source of instability, tweak the RAM settings. Loosening RAM timings and/or increasing vdimm may address this issue...
  • Be aware that excessive vdimm will void most manufacturers' warranties.
  • Adjust Northbridge voltage - Higher frequencies require additional voltage to the NB. In general, this setting only goes up a few notches from stock speed to extreme overclocks. Stock Northbridge coolers may not be able to handle additional voltage, so it may be necessary to invest in aftermarket cooling.
As with increasing the clock speed, it is important to change these settings in small steps, reboot, and test for stability.

Maximizing the Overclock on a System

One way to simplify overclocking is to initially take the RAM out of the equation...
Select a divider such that the RAM does not exceed stock speeds; this permits attention to be focused on the CPU and motherboard...
Once the maximum overclock of those two components is found, manipulate the divider to determine the optimal frequency for the RAM. Be sure to use Memtest86 to test RAM stability...
A few complete passes with that software is generally a good indication of stability.

Manipulating the CPU multiplier can lead to better performance on systems that support that feature...
First, find the maximum CPU frequency as described above with the stock multiplier. Then, determine other combinations of external clock speed and multiplier that equate to the same CPU frequency...
Using the example from item number 6, above, that CPU could equally handle 400x9 and 450x8. If the RAM and motherboard could safely handle the higher frequencies, the lower multiplier would most likely produce the best performance. Trial and error plays into this equation as well, due to the complexities of modern systems...
It is important to benchmark a system with appropriate applications (e.g. using gaming benchmarks for a gaming system, productivity benchmarks for an office system, etc.) to see which combination of settings provide the best performance. Remember that each set of components is unique, and that the goal of overclocking is performance not any specified settings.

remember ......OCing is an Art not a science :)
 
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My Computer

System One

  • Manufacturer/Model
    ME.....
    CPU
    Q9450 @ 3.6ghz
    Motherboard
    P5K PREMIUM
    Memory
    8GB 1066mhz buffalo firestix
    Graphics Card(s)
    HD 5970
    Monitor(s) Displays
    20'' syncmaster
    Screen Resolution
    1680x1050
    Hard Drives
    160GB 7200RPM SEAGATE BARRACUDA IDE
    160GB 7200RPM SEAGATE BARRACUDA SATA 2
    PSU
    XCILIO 850w
    Case
    unknown ATX
    Cooling
    Arctic cooler pro 775
    Keyboard
    logitech EX110
    Mouse
    logitech cordless optical
    Internet Speed
    2mb
Hi Skunksmash,

Nice guide, might give my OC another go and make sure Spread Spectrum = disabled, PCI/AGP/PCIe = locked, Stop unused PCI clock = enabled and Legacy USB = disabled.

How much can I raise the PCIe frequency and where would I find what it is at now as that was something I had a look at in the bios but wasn't sure if I should play arround with it or not.
 

My Computer

System One

  • Manufacturer/Model
    HOME BREW
    CPU
    Core 2 E8500 3.16Ghz @ 4.05Ghz
    Motherboard
    EVGA NVIDIA NFORCE 750i SLI FTW
    Memory
    2x2Gb Patriot PC2-6400 LL
    Graphics Card(s)
    Inno3D GeForce GTX260 216 SP
    Monitor(s) Displays
    ASUS VW222U 22" 2ms Response time
    Screen Resolution
    1680x1050
    Hard Drives
    SATA 150GB
    SATA II 250GB
    USB IDE 300GB Ext.
    PSU
    HYTEC 600W & Thermaltake Toughpower Power Express 650W
    Case
    Thermaltake Armor LCS (Liquid Cooling System)
    Cooling
    Liquid Cooling System
    Keyboard
    Logitech G15 Gaming Keyboard
    Mouse
    Logitech G9 Gaming Mouse
Hi Skunksmash,

Nice guide, might give my OC another go and make sure Spread Spectrum = disabled, PCI/AGP/PCIe = locked, Stop unused PCI clock = enabled and Legacy USB = disabled.

How much can I raise the PCIe frequency and where would I find what it is at now as that was something I had a look at in the bios but wasn't sure if I should play arround with it or not.

well by default the PCI-e bus should be at 100mhz..
there is a myth that a higher bus will net higher GPU clocks but i have no real evidence to support it...

mine is set @ 110mhz 24/7 but do not go higher than this..

the PCI-e frequency should be in the same section of the BIOS where the other voltages are.. ''Advanced options''

It vary s from board to board & low end boards wont even allow this function so the PCI bus goes up with the FSB & causes all sorts of instability

i would leave it where it is for now you can mess around with that once your happy with your overclock...
:)
 

My Computer

System One

  • Manufacturer/Model
    ME.....
    CPU
    Q9450 @ 3.6ghz
    Motherboard
    P5K PREMIUM
    Memory
    8GB 1066mhz buffalo firestix
    Graphics Card(s)
    HD 5970
    Monitor(s) Displays
    20'' syncmaster
    Screen Resolution
    1680x1050
    Hard Drives
    160GB 7200RPM SEAGATE BARRACUDA IDE
    160GB 7200RPM SEAGATE BARRACUDA SATA 2
    PSU
    XCILIO 850w
    Case
    unknown ATX
    Cooling
    Arctic cooler pro 775
    Keyboard
    logitech EX110
    Mouse
    logitech cordless optical
    Internet Speed
    2mb
Nice work Sir
 

My Computer

System One

  • CPU
    Q9650 E0 4.0 GHz @1.304v
    Motherboard
    eVGA 750i FTW
    Memory
    2x2GB Corsair Dominator PC2-8500C5D
    Graphics Card(s)
    eVGA/MSI GTX 260 SLI
    Sound Card
    X-Fi XtremeGamer
    Monitor(s) Displays
    Samsung T240 & 226BW
    Screen Resolution
    1920x1200 & 1680x1050
    Hard Drives
    Seagate Cuda 500GB 32mb Cache SATA 7200.(11) + 500GB Seagate Cuda External eSATA, USB, FW400
    PSU
    PC P&C 750w Silencer PSU
    Case
    CoolerMaster HAF 932 (Water-Cooled)
    Cooling
    Plenty of Fans, and a few 230mm Fans
    Keyboard
    Logitech G11
    Mouse
    Logitech MX-518
    Other Info
    ASUS 20x Optical, Bose Companion 3, ATH-AD500 Cans :), Patriot Xporter 16GB Flash Drive (Very Fast), & Sandisk Micro 8GB.

    Nikon D40 DSLR with 18-105mm VR & 55-200mm VR
You just earned 101 of my rep pts, sirrah.
 

My Computers

System One System Two

  • Operating System
    Windows 10 Pro X64 Insider Preview (Skip Ahead) latest build
    Manufacturer/Model
    The Beast Model V (homebrew)
    CPU
    Intel Core i7 965 EE @ 3.6 GHz
    Motherboard
    eVGA X58 Classified 3 (141-GT-E770-A1)
    Memory
    3 * Mushkin 998981 Redline Enhanced triple channel DDR3 4 GB CL7 DDR3 1600 MHz (PC3-12800)
    Graphics Card(s)
    eVGA GeForce GTX 970 SSC ACX 2.0 (04G-P4-3979-KB)
    Sound Card
    Realtek HD Audio (onboard)
    Monitor(s) Displays
    2 * Lenovo LT2323pwA Widescreeen
    Screen Resolution
    2 * 1920 x 1080
    Hard Drives
    SanDisk Ultra SDSSDHII-960G-G25 960 GB SATA III SSD (System)
    Crucial MX100 CT256MX100SSD1 256GB SATA III SSD (User Tree)
    2 * Seagate Barracuda 7200.12 ST31000528AS 1TB 7200 RPM SATA II Mech. HD
    Seagate ST1500DL001-9VT15L Barracuda 7200.12 1.5 TB S
    PSU
    Thermaltake Black Widow TX TR2 850W 80+ Bronze Semi-Mod ATX
    Case
    ThermalTake Level 10 GT (Black)
    Cooling
    Corsair H100 (CPU, dual 140 mm fans on radiator) + Air (2 *
    Keyboard
    Logitech G15 (gen 2)
    Mouse
    Logitech MX Master (shared)
    Internet Speed
    AT&T Lightspeed Gigabit duplex
  • Operating System
    Sabayon Linux (current, weekly updates, 5.1.x kernel)
    Manufacturer/Model
    Lenovo ThinkPad E545
    CPU
    AMD A6-5350M APU
    Motherboard
    Lenovo
    Memory
    8 GB
    Graphics card(s)
    Radeon HD (Embedded)
    Sound Card
    Conextant 20671 SmartAudio HD
    Monitor(s) Displays
    Lenovo 15" Matte
    Screen Resolution
    1680 * 1050
    Hard Drives
    INTEL Cherryvill 520 Series SSDSC2CW180A 180 GB SSD
    PSU
    Lenovo
    Case
    Lenovo
    Cooling
    Lenovo
    Mouse
    Logitech MX Master (shared) | Synaptics TouchPad
    Keyboard
    Lenovo
    Internet Speed
    AT&T LightSpeed Gigabit Duplex
skunksmash
Thanks allot for this amazing information's, I was looking for this since I got my self a good PC with good cooling system. Now I know some important things in the art of OCing ;)

I will be back again to have a closer view on the things you were explaining
Thanks for your time and effort on this great topic mate ^^

Cheers!
-Scott
 
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My Computer

System One

  • CPU
    Q6600 OCed till 3.3Ghz
    Motherboard
    Nvidia XFX nForce 780i SLI
    Memory
    2X2GB Corsair DDR2 800Mhz OCed @ 820Mhz
    Graphics Card(s)
    2xNvidia 9500 GT SLI OCed @ 730Mhz each.
    Sound Card
    Motherboard Built in
    Monitor(s) Displays
    Acer 22' LCD + 18.5 Wide Samsung LCD
    Screen Resolution
    1680 1050
    Hard Drives
    Internal 2x250 GB SATA II Maxtor,
    External 500GB SATA WD,
    PSU
    600Watts
    Case
    GIGABYTE
    Cooling
    GIGABYTE Volar CPU Cooler
    Keyboard
    Samsung Pleomax
    Mouse
    Prestigio
    Internet Speed
    2Mbps
I found this guide on my hard drive when I wanted to OC, might be useful for some people....enjoy:)

Kentsfield popular Quad configurations.


CPU FSB QDR Multi RAM Final MHZ
Q6600 266Mhz 1066QDR 9x 533Mhz =2400Mhz
Q6600 333Mhz 1333QDR 9x 667Mhz =3000Mhz
Q6600 400Mhz 1600QDR 8x 800Mhz =3200Mhz
Q6600 375Mhz 1500QDR 9x 750Mhz =3375Mhz
Q6600 450Mhz 1800QDR 8x 900Mhz =3600Mhz
Q6600 400Mhz 1600QDR 9x 800Mhz =3600Mhz

Q6600 416.6Mhz 1666QDR 9x 833Mhz =3750Mhz
Q6600 425Mhz 1700QDR 9x 850Mhz =3830Mhz
Q6600 450Mhz 1800QDR 9x 900Mhz =4050Mhz
Q6600 466.6Mhz 1866QDR 9x 933Mhz =4200Mhz
Q6600 475Mhz 1900QDR* 9x 950Mhz =4275Mhz

_____________________________________________________________________________
Q6700 266Mhz 1066QDR 10x 533Mhz =2660Mhz
Q6700 333Mhz 1333QDR 10x 667Mhz =3330Mhz
Q6700 375Mhz 1500QDR 10x 750Mhz =3750Mhz
Q6700 400Mhz 1600QDR 10x 800Mhz =4000Mhz
Q6700 416.6Mhz 1666QDR 10x 833Mhz =4166Mhz
Q6700 425Mhz 1700QDR 10x 850Mhz =4250Mhz
Q6700 450Mhz 1800QDR 10x 900Mhz =4500Mhz
Q6700 466.6Mhz 1866QDR 10x 933Mhz =4666Mhz
Q6700 475Mhz 1900QDR* 10x 950Mhz =4750Mhz

_____________________________________________________________________________

Qx6850 333Mhz 1333QDR 9x 667Mhz =3000Mhz
Qx6850 375Mhz 1500QDR 9x 750Mhz =3375Mhz
Qx6850 400Mhz 1600QDR 9x 800Mhz =3600Mhz
Qx6850 416.6Mhz 1666QDR 9x 833Mhz =3750Mhz
Qx6850 425Mhz 1700QDR 9x 850Mhz =3830Mhz
Qx6850 450Mhz 1800QDR 9x 900Mhz =4050Mhz
Qx6850 466.6Mhz 1866QDR 9x 933Mhz =4200Mhz
Qx6850 475Mhz 1900QDR* 9x 950Mhz =4275Mhz

Qx6850 333Mhz 1333QDR 10x 667Mhz =3333Mhz
Qx6850 375Mhz 1500QDR 10x 750Mhz =3750Mhz
Qx6850 400Mhz 1600QDR 10x 800Mhz =4000Mhz
Qx6850 416.6Mhz 1666QDR 10x 833Mhz =4160Mhz
Qx6850 450Mhz 1800QDR 10x 900Mhz =4500Mhz
Qx6850 466.6Mhz 1866QDR 10x 933Mhz =4666Mhz
Qx6850 475Mhz 1900QDR* 10x 950Mhz =4750Mhz

Qx6850 333Mhz 1333QDR 11x 667Mhz =3663Mhz
Qx6850 375Mhz 1500QDR 11x 750Mhz =4125Mhz
Qx6850 400Mhz 1600QDR 11x 800Mhz =4400Mhz
Qx6850 416.6Mhz 1666QDR 11x 833Mhz =4582Mhz
Qx6850 450Mhz 1800QDR 11x 900Mhz =4950Mhz
Qx6850 466.6Mhz 1866QDR 11x 933Mhz =5126Mhz
Qx6850 475Mhz 1900QDR* 11x 950Mhz =5225Mhz

Yorkfield popular Quad configurations.**

CPU FSB QDR Multi RAM Final MHZ
Q9450 333Mhz 1333QDR 8x 667Mhz =2660Mhz
Q9450 400Mhz 1600QDR 8x 800Mhz =3200Mhz
Q9450 416.6Mhz 1666QDR 8x 833Mhz =3333Mhz
Q9450 450Mhz 1800QDR 8x 900Mhz =3600Mhz
Q9450 466.6Mhz 1866QDR 8x 933Mhz =3733Mhz
Q9450 475Mhz 1900QDR* 8x 950Mhz =3800Mhz

_____________________________________________________________________________
Q9550 333Mhz 1333QDR 8.5x 667Mhz =2830Mhz
Q9550 400Mhz 1600QDR 8.5x 800Mhz =3400Mhz
Q9550 416.6Mhz 1666QDR 8.5x 833Mhz =3541Mhz
Q9550 450Mhz 1800QDR 8.5x 900Mhz =3825Mhz
Q9550 466.6Mhz 1866QDR 8.5x 933Mhz =3966Mhz
Q9550 475Mhz 1900QDR* 8.5x 950Mhz =4040Mhz

____________________________________________________________________________
Qx9650 333Mhz 1333QDR 9x 667Mhz =3000Mhz
Qx9650 375Mhz 1500QDR 9x 750Mhz =3375Mhz
Qx9650 400Mhz 1600QDR 9x 800Mhz =3600Mhz
Qx9650 416.6Mhz 1666QDR 9x 833Mhz =3750Mhz
Qx9650 425Mhz 1700QDR 9x 850Mhz =3830Mhz
Qx9650 450Mhz 1800QDR 9x 900Mhz =4050Mhz
Qx9650 466.6Mhz 1866QDR 9x 933Mhz =4200Mhz
Qx9650 475Mhz 1900QDR* 9x 950Mhz =4275Mhz

Qx9650 333Mhz 1333QDR 10x 667Mhz =3333Mhz
Qx9650 375Mhz 1500QDR 10x 750Mhz =3750Mhz
Qx9650 400Mhz 1600QDR 10x 800Mhz =4000Mhz
Qx9650 416.6Mhz 1666QDR 10x 833Mhz =4160Mhz
Qx9650 450Mhz 1800QDR 10x 900Mhz =4500Mhz
Qx9650 466.6Mhz 1866QDR 10x 933Mhz =4666Mhz
Qx9650 475Mhz 1900QDR* 10x 950Mhz =4750Mhz

Qx9650 333Mhz 1333QDR 11x 667Mhz =3663Mhz
Qx9650 375Mhz 1500QDR 11x 750Mhz =4125Mhz
Qx9650 400Mhz 1600QDR 11x 800Mhz =4400Mhz
Qx9650 416.6Mhz 1666QDR 11x 833Mhz =4582Mhz
Qx9650 450Mhz 1800QDR 11x 900Mhz =4950Mhz
Qx9650 466.6Mhz 1866QDR 11x 933Mhz =5126Mhz
Qx9650 475Mhz 1900QDR* 11x 950Mhz =5225Mhz
 

My Computer

System One

  • Manufacturer/Model
    custom of course...
    CPU
    Intel Quad Q9650 3.00GHz
    Motherboard
    EVGA 790i Ultra 3-way SLi
    Memory
    OCZ NVIDIA SLI Ready 8GB DDR3 1800MHz @1.9V
    Graphics Card(s)
    BFG GeForce 280 GTX OC EditionX2 SLi'd
    Sound Card
    SoundBlaster X-FI Titanium Fatal1ty Pro Series
    Monitor(s) Displays
    Samsung 52" 1080P LCD HDTV (LN52B550)
    Screen Resolution
    1920X1080
    Hard Drives
    2XWestern Digital WD1001FALS Caviar Black Hard Drive - 1TB
    PSU
    ThermalTake ToughPower 1200watt W0113RU
    Case
    Thermaltake Armor 6000BWS
    Cooling
    ThermalTake MaxOrb CL-P0369
    Keyboard
    Logitech cordless Y-RAJ56A piece of ****
    Mouse
    Logitech G7 Laser Cordless mouse black - niiice:)
    Internet Speed
    10 Mb/sec DL - 1 Mb/sec UL
    Other Info
    D-Link DGL-4500 Extreme N wireless router ...siiick:)
    2XSamsung SH-S223Q/BEBN SATA LightScribe
    1XLG GGW-H20L super-multi Blu-Ray burner
    Belkin UPS F6C1500TWRK
    Pioneer 7.1 Channel HDMI Receiver (VSX-9130TXV-K)
the ones highlighted are the more popular configurations.
 

My Computer

System One

  • Manufacturer/Model
    custom of course...
    CPU
    Intel Quad Q9650 3.00GHz
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    EVGA 790i Ultra 3-way SLi
    Memory
    OCZ NVIDIA SLI Ready 8GB DDR3 1800MHz @1.9V
    Graphics Card(s)
    BFG GeForce 280 GTX OC EditionX2 SLi'd
    Sound Card
    SoundBlaster X-FI Titanium Fatal1ty Pro Series
    Monitor(s) Displays
    Samsung 52" 1080P LCD HDTV (LN52B550)
    Screen Resolution
    1920X1080
    Hard Drives
    2XWestern Digital WD1001FALS Caviar Black Hard Drive - 1TB
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    ThermalTake ToughPower 1200watt W0113RU
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    Thermaltake Armor 6000BWS
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    ThermalTake MaxOrb CL-P0369
    Keyboard
    Logitech cordless Y-RAJ56A piece of ****
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    Logitech G7 Laser Cordless mouse black - niiice:)
    Internet Speed
    10 Mb/sec DL - 1 Mb/sec UL
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    D-Link DGL-4500 Extreme N wireless router ...siiick:)
    2XSamsung SH-S223Q/BEBN SATA LightScribe
    1XLG GGW-H20L super-multi Blu-Ray burner
    Belkin UPS F6C1500TWRK
    Pioneer 7.1 Channel HDMI Receiver (VSX-9130TXV-K)
Nice work.
 

My Computer

System One

  • CPU
    Q9650 E0 4.0 GHz @1.304v
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    eVGA 750i FTW
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    2x2GB Corsair Dominator PC2-8500C5D
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    eVGA/MSI GTX 260 SLI
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    X-Fi XtremeGamer
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    Samsung T240 & 226BW
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    1920x1200 & 1680x1050
    Hard Drives
    Seagate Cuda 500GB 32mb Cache SATA 7200.(11) + 500GB Seagate Cuda External eSATA, USB, FW400
    PSU
    PC P&C 750w Silencer PSU
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    CoolerMaster HAF 932 (Water-Cooled)
    Cooling
    Plenty of Fans, and a few 230mm Fans
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    Logitech G11
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    Logitech MX-518
    Other Info
    ASUS 20x Optical, Bose Companion 3, ATH-AD500 Cans :), Patriot Xporter 16GB Flash Drive (Very Fast), & Sandisk Micro 8GB.

    Nikon D40 DSLR with 18-105mm VR & 55-200mm VR
Making a new thread for my question. Sorry.
 
Last edited:

My Computer

System One

  • CPU
    Q6600
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    XFX 680i SLI LT
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    8 GB Corsair Xtreme DDR2 800Mhz
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    21" Hitachi
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    1600 x 1200 @ 75Hz
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    (2) Raptor 150 Raid
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    Antec True Power Quattro 1000 Watt
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    Full Size Rocketfish
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    Adaptec 29160 scsi card. PNY PCI-x raid card.
I'm new to overclocking with Intels as I've used AMD for the last few years, but is the CPU:RAM divider the FSB divided by 4?

I was testing some OCing last night, and put the FSB QDR to 1500 with the multiplier at 7, which got my E8200 from 2.66 to 3.00GHz and it ran fine with no noticable temp increase of voltage increase needed.

My RAM is only 667MHz atm, so 333MHz, so keeping the multipler at 7 and putting the FSB QDR to 1500, would have an external clock speed of 375. Is this a good setting to have? It ran stable after a few benchmarking tests and the CPU score in 3dmark vantage increased by over 1000 as well.
 

My Computer

System One

  • Manufacturer/Model
    Custom Built
    CPU
    Intel Core 2 Quad Q9550
    Motherboard
    XFX MB-750I-72P9 NF750i
    Memory
    4096MB Corsair XMS2 PC-5400
    Graphics Card(s)
    ASUS Nvidia Geforce GTX470
    Sound Card
    ASUS Xonar DX
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    Dell 24" S2409W & Dell 20" E207WFP
    Screen Resolution
    1920x1080 & 1680x1050
    Hard Drives
    750GB Western Digital Caviar Black & 500GB Samsung
    PSU
    750 watt Thermaltake Toughpower
    Case
    Coolermaster Dominator 690 Nvidia Edition
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    Zalman CNPS9700-NT Cooler, 6x 120mm Chassis Fans
    Keyboard
    Logitech G11 Keyboard
    Mouse
    Logitech G5 Laser Mouse (2007 edition)
    Internet Speed
    100Mbps
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    abit airpace 54mbps wireless PCI-E x1 card
Try setting the FSB to 1600 and the multi at 8x to give 3.2Ghz raise the memory to 400 and change the memory timing to about 5,4,4,12 T2, set the memory voltage to 2.1v and the CPU voltage to about 1.35v which will be about 1.32v in CPU-Z.

That should give you a nice solid OC, as long as your RAM can hold those settings, I have some RAM on a older machine running that spec and that was just generic 667mhz RAM so should be OK

My CPU is the same as yours but I have a 9.5 multiplier but aside from that I am using those settings I gave you 24/7
 

My Computer

System One

  • Manufacturer/Model
    HOME BREW
    CPU
    Core 2 E8500 3.16Ghz @ 4.05Ghz
    Motherboard
    EVGA NVIDIA NFORCE 750i SLI FTW
    Memory
    2x2Gb Patriot PC2-6400 LL
    Graphics Card(s)
    Inno3D GeForce GTX260 216 SP
    Monitor(s) Displays
    ASUS VW222U 22" 2ms Response time
    Screen Resolution
    1680x1050
    Hard Drives
    SATA 150GB
    SATA II 250GB
    USB IDE 300GB Ext.
    PSU
    HYTEC 600W & Thermaltake Toughpower Power Express 650W
    Case
    Thermaltake Armor LCS (Liquid Cooling System)
    Cooling
    Liquid Cooling System
    Keyboard
    Logitech G15 Gaming Keyboard
    Mouse
    Logitech G9 Gaming Mouse
I just noticed that with your FSB at 1500 with your multi set to 7 that will only give you 2.625Ghz so that would mean you have underclocked your CPU but you have increased your FSB and RAM speed which would explain your results in 3DMarkVantage.

To see your Result of your overclock check it with CPU-Z as I take it you were using Vantage to see 3Ghz but that will show you what it would be with your multi at 8.

So with your Bus speed at 375 x your multi at 8 will give you 3Ghz (3000Mhz). Your Bus speed of 375 x 4 will give you your FSB of 1500 and your Ram speed set at 375 x 2 will give you 750Mhz.
 

My Computer

System One

  • Manufacturer/Model
    HOME BREW
    CPU
    Core 2 E8500 3.16Ghz @ 4.05Ghz
    Motherboard
    EVGA NVIDIA NFORCE 750i SLI FTW
    Memory
    2x2Gb Patriot PC2-6400 LL
    Graphics Card(s)
    Inno3D GeForce GTX260 216 SP
    Monitor(s) Displays
    ASUS VW222U 22" 2ms Response time
    Screen Resolution
    1680x1050
    Hard Drives
    SATA 150GB
    SATA II 250GB
    USB IDE 300GB Ext.
    PSU
    HYTEC 600W & Thermaltake Toughpower Power Express 650W
    Case
    Thermaltake Armor LCS (Liquid Cooling System)
    Cooling
    Liquid Cooling System
    Keyboard
    Logitech G15 Gaming Keyboard
    Mouse
    Logitech G9 Gaming Mouse
Sorry, it's a multiplier of 8 I had, not 7. 7 is what I was going to try.

So it would have been 1500/4 = 375, then 375x8 for 3000.

I'm not sure it has a RAM thing like what you described. There's a RAM frequency bit I can increase, but while I'm raising the FSB, the RAM frequency changes between 629 to 667. It was at 667 when I hit 1500, so would I just raise this to overclock the RAM?
 

My Computer

System One

  • Manufacturer/Model
    Custom Built
    CPU
    Intel Core 2 Quad Q9550
    Motherboard
    XFX MB-750I-72P9 NF750i
    Memory
    4096MB Corsair XMS2 PC-5400
    Graphics Card(s)
    ASUS Nvidia Geforce GTX470
    Sound Card
    ASUS Xonar DX
    Monitor(s) Displays
    Dell 24" S2409W & Dell 20" E207WFP
    Screen Resolution
    1920x1080 & 1680x1050
    Hard Drives
    750GB Western Digital Caviar Black & 500GB Samsung
    PSU
    750 watt Thermaltake Toughpower
    Case
    Coolermaster Dominator 690 Nvidia Edition
    Cooling
    Zalman CNPS9700-NT Cooler, 6x 120mm Chassis Fans
    Keyboard
    Logitech G11 Keyboard
    Mouse
    Logitech G5 Laser Mouse (2007 edition)
    Internet Speed
    100Mbps
    Other Info
    abit airpace 54mbps wireless PCI-E x1 card
Yes you should be able to do that, although you can keep the RAM where it is if you like, it's not a necessity to overclock the RAM with your CPU and sometimes it's better to have it lower if you want a higher CPU clock.
 

My Computer

System One

  • Manufacturer/Model
    HOME BREW
    CPU
    Core 2 E8500 3.16Ghz @ 4.05Ghz
    Motherboard
    EVGA NVIDIA NFORCE 750i SLI FTW
    Memory
    2x2Gb Patriot PC2-6400 LL
    Graphics Card(s)
    Inno3D GeForce GTX260 216 SP
    Monitor(s) Displays
    ASUS VW222U 22" 2ms Response time
    Screen Resolution
    1680x1050
    Hard Drives
    SATA 150GB
    SATA II 250GB
    USB IDE 300GB Ext.
    PSU
    HYTEC 600W & Thermaltake Toughpower Power Express 650W
    Case
    Thermaltake Armor LCS (Liquid Cooling System)
    Cooling
    Liquid Cooling System
    Keyboard
    Logitech G15 Gaming Keyboard
    Mouse
    Logitech G9 Gaming Mouse
Hi Folks, finally tried my first overclock on my Q6600 and it seems to be ok. I've altered the FSB frequency to 333 Mhz put the PCie frequency to 101 and the FSB strap to NB at 333.
This gives me a speed of 3005 Mhz on the 9x multiplier and that flips to 2003 on the 6x.
This Asus P5Q Pro has this power saving function that flips the multiplier automatically.
Everything seems to be stable so far and my idle speeds according to Core Temp are at between 55 and 59 on all 4 cores.
I just played Crysis Warhead for 40 minutes and my temps shot up to the late 70s reaching 80c on one core.
Is this ok temperature wise?
I'm running DDR2 8500 at 1066Mhz.
Comments welcome.
Thanks, John:)
 

My Computer

System One

  • Manufacturer/Model
    custom build
    CPU
    Q6600 OCd to 3.06GHz
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    Asus P5Q Pro
    Memory
    Corsair 2x2GB TWIN2X4096-8500C5DF G
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    XFX GTX 260 Black Edition
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    Dell Utrasharp 2408WFP
    Screen Resolution
    1920x1200
    Hard Drives
    2x Samsung Spinpoint 500GB
    1x Samsung F1 1TB
    PSU
    Thermaltake Toughpower 650 watt
    Case
    Coolermaster Cosmos S
    Cooling
    Tuniq Tower 120 + 3x120mm + 200m side fan
    Keyboard
    logitech Wave
    Mouse
    Roccat Kone
    Internet Speed
    supposedly 8mbps actually about 4 or 5
    Other Info
    love this mouse
Hi Folks, finally tried my first overclock on my Q6600 and it seems to be ok. I've altered the FSB frequency to 333 Mhz put the PCie frequency to 101 and the FSB strap to NB at 333.
This gives me a speed of 3005 Mhz on the 9x multiplier and that flips to 2003 on the 6x.
This Asus P5Q Pro has this power saving function that flips the multiplier automatically.
Everything seems to be stable so far and my idle speeds according to Core Temp are at between 55 and 59 on all 4 cores.
I just played Crysis Warhead for 40 minutes and my temps shot up to the late 70s reaching 80c on one core.
Is this ok temperature wise?
I'm running DDR2 8500 at 1066Mhz.
Comments welcome.
Thanks, John:)

Your overclock is good but not your temps, you need to get better CPU cooling, you don't want to go any higher than 65c for any amount of time.
 

My Computer

System One

  • Manufacturer/Model
    HOME BREW
    CPU
    Core 2 E8500 3.16Ghz @ 4.05Ghz
    Motherboard
    EVGA NVIDIA NFORCE 750i SLI FTW
    Memory
    2x2Gb Patriot PC2-6400 LL
    Graphics Card(s)
    Inno3D GeForce GTX260 216 SP
    Monitor(s) Displays
    ASUS VW222U 22" 2ms Response time
    Screen Resolution
    1680x1050
    Hard Drives
    SATA 150GB
    SATA II 250GB
    USB IDE 300GB Ext.
    PSU
    HYTEC 600W & Thermaltake Toughpower Power Express 650W
    Case
    Thermaltake Armor LCS (Liquid Cooling System)
    Cooling
    Liquid Cooling System
    Keyboard
    Logitech G15 Gaming Keyboard
    Mouse
    Logitech G9 Gaming Mouse
Yes you should be able to do that, although you can keep the RAM where it is if you like, it's not a necessity to overclock the RAM with your CPU and sometimes it's better to have it lower if you want a higher CPU clock.

Okay, thanks a lot for your help :)
 

My Computer

System One

  • Manufacturer/Model
    Custom Built
    CPU
    Intel Core 2 Quad Q9550
    Motherboard
    XFX MB-750I-72P9 NF750i
    Memory
    4096MB Corsair XMS2 PC-5400
    Graphics Card(s)
    ASUS Nvidia Geforce GTX470
    Sound Card
    ASUS Xonar DX
    Monitor(s) Displays
    Dell 24" S2409W & Dell 20" E207WFP
    Screen Resolution
    1920x1080 & 1680x1050
    Hard Drives
    750GB Western Digital Caviar Black & 500GB Samsung
    PSU
    750 watt Thermaltake Toughpower
    Case
    Coolermaster Dominator 690 Nvidia Edition
    Cooling
    Zalman CNPS9700-NT Cooler, 6x 120mm Chassis Fans
    Keyboard
    Logitech G11 Keyboard
    Mouse
    Logitech G5 Laser Mouse (2007 edition)
    Internet Speed
    100Mbps
    Other Info
    abit airpace 54mbps wireless PCI-E x1 card

My Computer

System One

  • Manufacturer/Model
    HOME BREW
    CPU
    Core 2 E8500 3.16Ghz @ 4.05Ghz
    Motherboard
    EVGA NVIDIA NFORCE 750i SLI FTW
    Memory
    2x2Gb Patriot PC2-6400 LL
    Graphics Card(s)
    Inno3D GeForce GTX260 216 SP
    Monitor(s) Displays
    ASUS VW222U 22" 2ms Response time
    Screen Resolution
    1680x1050
    Hard Drives
    SATA 150GB
    SATA II 250GB
    USB IDE 300GB Ext.
    PSU
    HYTEC 600W & Thermaltake Toughpower Power Express 650W
    Case
    Thermaltake Armor LCS (Liquid Cooling System)
    Cooling
    Liquid Cooling System
    Keyboard
    Logitech G15 Gaming Keyboard
    Mouse
    Logitech G9 Gaming Mouse
Hi Mr Grim, thanks for your input. I have a Thermaltake Golden Orb CPU cooler which I had hoped would be sufficient but apparently not.
On the other hand I've just had a system refurb (new mobo) performed at a local PC store so it might be that they have not replaced the cooler correctly.
Do you think this might be the case or do you feel the Thermaltake is insufficient?
If so could you recommend a better cooler?
Thanks for your help, John:)
 

My Computer

System One

  • Manufacturer/Model
    custom build
    CPU
    Q6600 OCd to 3.06GHz
    Motherboard
    Asus P5Q Pro
    Memory
    Corsair 2x2GB TWIN2X4096-8500C5DF G
    Graphics Card(s)
    XFX GTX 260 Black Edition
    Monitor(s) Displays
    Dell Utrasharp 2408WFP
    Screen Resolution
    1920x1200
    Hard Drives
    2x Samsung Spinpoint 500GB
    1x Samsung F1 1TB
    PSU
    Thermaltake Toughpower 650 watt
    Case
    Coolermaster Cosmos S
    Cooling
    Tuniq Tower 120 + 3x120mm + 200m side fan
    Keyboard
    logitech Wave
    Mouse
    Roccat Kone
    Internet Speed
    supposedly 8mbps actually about 4 or 5
    Other Info
    love this mouse
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