Aces High Bulletin Board

General Forums => Hardware and Software => Topic started by: AirFlyer on December 24, 2008, 12:17:57 PM

Title: Q6600 at 3.6Ghz
Post by: AirFlyer on December 24, 2008, 12:17:57 PM
As the title says I got my my Q6600 to 3.6Ghz, which is a 50% over clock I believe. Both my CPU FSB and Memory bus are running at 400Mhz now. So far it seems stable but I didn't really get to test run it yet, does anyone know any good stability testing programs? Also does anyone else have an over clocked Q6600, curious to see what your at.

P.S. Temperature currently for it is 38C.
Title: Re: Q6600 at 3.6Ghz
Post by: Fulmar on December 24, 2008, 12:36:00 PM
Is that the core temp?
Title: Re: Q6600 at 3.6Ghz
Post by: AirFlyer on December 24, 2008, 12:43:12 PM
Using Everest to read my temperatures, it gives me 5 temperatures for my CPU. One is labled CPU and the others are Core# 1 - 4 respectively which all run about 40C, so I assume it's just an average.
Title: Re: Q6600 at 3.6Ghz
Post by: Fulmar on December 24, 2008, 01:05:05 PM
The 'CPU' temperature is the Thermal Diode that is located underneath all the cores.  And the 'Core' temperature are Digital Thermal sensors that are located on each core.  The 'core' temp is going to be higher.  Either way your temperatures are very good.  You should try and run multiple instances of Prime95 (open the program up more than once - google it to learn how).  When you open it more than once (do it 4 times for your Quad core) you can stress each core at 100%.

Tomshardware.com forums have excellent guides on this - that is if you haven't done this already.

What cooling measures are you using?
Title: Re: Q6600 at 3.6Ghz
Post by: AirFlyer on December 24, 2008, 01:10:52 PM
Never heard of it but I'll look into it. As far as cooling for my CPU I'm using a ZALMAN CNPS9500 AT(link below) with Artic Silver 5 grease and my Antec 1200 case.

http://www.newegg.com/Product/Product.aspx?Item=N82E16835118003
Title: Re: Q6600 at 3.6Ghz
Post by: TilDeath on December 24, 2008, 06:29:44 PM
Here is links to software to check stability.  They are from my overclocking site and all the software and utilities have been scanned for malware and viruses.

RealTemp for showing temps http://overclocksource.com/index.php?option=com_content&view=article&id=63:realtemp&catid=21:benchmarkingsoftware&Itemid=11 (http://overclocksource.com/index.php?option=com_content&view=article&id=63:realtemp&catid=21:benchmarkingsoftware&Itemid=11)

OCCT (Overclock Checking Tool http://overclocksource.com/index.php?option=com_content&view=article&id=86:occt&catid=21:benchmarkingsoftware&Itemid=11 (http://overclocksource.com/index.php?option=com_content&view=article&id=86:occt&catid=21:benchmarkingsoftware&Itemid=11)

Overclocking Utility Kit http://overclocksource.com/index.php?option=com_content&view=article&id=78:overclocking-software-kit&catid=21:benchmarkingsoftware&Itemid=11 (http://overclocksource.com/index.php?option=com_content&view=article&id=78:overclocking-software-kit&catid=21:benchmarkingsoftware&Itemid=11)

There is more software on my site available.  The link is at the bottom of the pages under "OVERCLOCKING SOFTWARE"  hope this helps

Title: Re: Q6600 at 3.6Ghz
Post by: Getback on December 24, 2008, 08:29:58 PM
I received an error code 4 on the occt tool. Couldn't find out what it was because I couldn't read it. I guess I need to download adobe. BTW my comp is clocked at 4.06 ghz and seems fine. However that tool only showed one core. The truetemp showed both cores working.
Title: Re: Q6600 at 3.6Ghz
Post by: TilDeath on December 25, 2008, 08:20:09 AM
I received an error code 4 on the occt tool. Couldn't find out what it was because I couldn't read it. I guess I need to download adobe. BTW my comp is clocked at 4.06 ghz and seems fine. However that tool only showed one core. The truetemp showed both cores working.
You need to set it up.  You can go to the OCCT site here http://www.ocbase.com/perestroika_en/ (http://www.ocbase.com/perestroika_en/) and get what you need.  If your stable this will let ya know.  I seen systems run for days then run OCCT and POOF lockup not truly stable.

4.06 is good what Processor? What temps ?  What voltage ?  Whats FSB ?  Whats memory timings ?  Whats mem clock running at ?  Whats the ration on FSB and CPU ?  What FSB does your MB handle (native OC)Tons of factors all need to be in harmony here not just a high OC of the CPU.  Is your CPU and MEM linked and Sync?  If not you have a bottle neck.
Title: Re: Q6600 at 3.6Ghz
Post by: Getback on December 25, 2008, 03:52:04 PM
You need to set it up.  You can go to the OCCT site here http://www.ocbase.com/perestroika_en/ (http://www.ocbase.com/perestroika_en/) and get what you need.  If your stable this will let ya know.  I seen systems run for days then run OCCT and POOF lockup not truly stable.

4.06 is good what Processor? What temps ?  What voltage ?  Whats FSB ?  Whats memory timings ?  Whats mem clock running at ?  Whats the ration on FSB and CPU ?  What FSB does your MB handle (native OC)Tons of factors all need to be in harmony here not just a high OC of the CPU.  Is your CPU and MEM linked and Sync?  If not you have a bottle neck.

Linked and synched. E8500 I think memory timings are 5 5 5 5 18 (Stock) FSB is 424 x 9.5 multiplier. Vcore is 1.355 DDR2 voltage is 2.25 Highest temp under test is 53c.
Title: Re: Q6600 at 3.6Ghz
Post by: AirFlyer on December 25, 2008, 04:42:35 PM
Hrm, seems it's a bit unstable at 3.6Ghz even though the temperatures are fine. Kept the FSB at 1600 and set the multiplier to x8 so it's at 3.2Ghz now but still has a 1:1 ratio.
Title: Re: Q6600 at 3.6Ghz
Post by: TilDeath on December 25, 2008, 05:28:43 PM
Hrm, seems it's a bit unstable at 3.6Ghz even though the temperatures are fine. Kept the FSB at 1600 and set the multiplier to x8 so it's at 3.2Ghz now but still has a 1:1 ratio.
Yea temps are not the only factor in stability.  You asked what others had OV at I have a Q6600 on a machine at the office thats at 3.8 (its a G0 series) actually a touch higher and stable.  Processor to Processor will attain different top ends.  If you can get is stable between 3.2 and 3.4 thats good enough I would say.  Unless you have the hours and hours to get it stable at 3.6 or more.
Title: Re: Q6600 at 3.6Ghz
Post by: TilDeath on December 25, 2008, 05:32:55 PM
Linked and synched. E8500 I think memory timings are 5 5 5 5 18 (Stock) FSB is 424 x 9.5 multiplier. Vcore is 1.355 DDR2 voltage is 2.25 Highest temp under test is 53c.
Is your FSB at 1696 or at 848.  Eith way great settings and voltage on the CPU.  can you get the mem to say less then 14 with a 1t and not a  2t setting?  then it will scream
Title: Re: Q6600 at 3.6Ghz
Post by: Getback on December 25, 2008, 10:35:53 PM
Is your FSB at 1696 or at 848.  Eith way great settings and voltage on the CPU.  can you get the mem to say less then 14 with a 1t and not a  2t setting?  then it will scream

Wow, I screwed something up when I tried to get Occt to run without error. Everything is at default now. I had it running 4.06 ghz for about 4 months and 3.8 ghz since purchase. Now she's down to 3.16 ghz.
Title: Re: Q6600 at 3.6Ghz
Post by: TilDeath on December 25, 2008, 10:45:00 PM
OCCT will tear at a system.  It will let ya know if your truely stable or not without a doubt.  Thats why when some say they OCed to this or that... without a true stress test it does not mean anything.  Find a OC that will handle OCCT for 24 hours then your stable.
Title: Re: Q6600 at 3.6Ghz
Post by: Getback on December 25, 2008, 11:41:36 PM
What do the codes mean. Where do I find those?

Also, why does it show it under clocked when it was over clocked?
Title: Re: Q6600 at 3.6Ghz
Post by: TilDeath on December 26, 2008, 10:20:25 AM
What do the codes mean. Where do I find those?

Also, why does it show it under clocked when it was over clocked?
Website has all the codes.  Check you BOIS.  Your CPU maybe overclocked but not actually OCing until its called for.  This is a BIOS setting.  When OCCT is at idle and it shows a different X.Xghz then what you OCed it to its a bios setting.  Wehn you run OCCT it will show the full overclock as soon as it starts running its tests.  It has a 1 min delay for its setup of itself then look at the settings, it should show what your OC is.  It will also show you temps.  If your OC lasts 24 hours on this your good.  Also to test your memory try Memtest86+  it will stress your memory, should run this for 8 hours with no failures for a stable OC.  If you cant do the above mentioned your risking losing data at any time if your system is OCed.