Will a 3.4 Prescott reach 4GHz+ ?

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I ordered a 3.4 478 Extreme but sadly the box turned up empty! :mad: :mad: :mad: (my first e8ay problem in over 110 transactions :( )

As it seems almost impossible to get a plain 3.4 northwood (let alone an Extreme) - I'm wondering about a Prescott.

As previously mentioned, I'd love to reach 4GHz - will a 3.4GHz Prescott over-heat before it gets there?

My water rig is working well - my 3.0 northwood is running 3.7GHz (1.6v) and the temp is 34 idle, 37.5 under load.

- Toff.
 
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The skt478 will need an extreme cooling solution but it can just about be done although sudden voltage death is a distinct possibility.

Not sure Intel ever released a skt478 3.4 though. Thought they just paper launched & maybe a few trickled out then went over to the skt775s which can clock well over 4Ghz.

TBH you are not gonna see much more performance anyway due to latency issues. Probably another 3-5% tops in real world performance.

Save your money & wait for Conroe.
 
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Well that pee's on my bonfire :rolleyes:

But of course you are right.. even without the latency issues, it'd be at least £150+ for a theoretical 300MHz raise! I guess I just got fixated on reaching 4 GHz!

I've got my Northwood 3.0 to around 3.7 by raising the voltage to 1.625v that means the FSB is around 255 (any further and it's unstable).

have I pretty much reached the limits of my processor, or are other people eeking more out of their 3.0 Northwoods?

Cheers - Toff.
 
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Toff said:
Well that pee's on my bonfire :rolleyes:

But of course you are right.. even without the latency issues, it'd be at least £150+ for a theoretical 300MHz raise! I guess I just got fixated on reaching 4 GHz!

I've got my Northwood 3.0 to around 3.7 by raising the voltage to 1.625v that means the FSB is around 255 (any further and it's unstable).

have I pretty much reached the limits of my processor, or are other people eeking more out of their 3.0 Northwoods?

Cheers - Toff.
If you buy some exotic ram that can reach a native FSB speed of 1066 then it may be possible with what you have as a higher FSB + lower CPU multiplier often gives better ocing results anyway as the mobo is more able to cope with higher FSBs than the CPU being maxed out alone.

http://www.overclockers.co.uk/acatalog/Online_Catalogue_Corsair_XMS_310.html

Try and find something which is DDR533 or higher as that may do the trick but not sure if your mobo needs a mod to do a higher FSB than that.
 
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a prescott would get you to 4ghz on water np, mine did, and my mobbo was gash!

4.2spi2.jpg
 
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Bundles.. that's amazing.. but I thought using a 5:4 ratio on the RAM wasn't as good as having a 1:1 (using suitably quick memory as AWPC suggested).

I thought raising the FSB (and core voltage - max 1.65v) gradually until the system proves unstable (then back-tracking until stable) was the best way to OC :confused:

Excuse my ignorance, should I drop the FSB back to standard and raise the multiplier instead?

- Toff.
 
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Toff said:
Bundles.. that's amazing.. but I thought using a 5:4 ratio on the RAM wasn't as good as having a 1:1 (using suitably quick memory as AWPC suggested).

I thought raising the FSB (and core voltage - max 1.65v) gradually until the system proves unstable (then back-tracking until stable) was the best way to OC :confused:

Excuse my ignorance, should I drop the FSB back to standard and raise the multiplier instead?

- Toff.

Cheers. 1:1 is preferable over 5:4, but on older intel systems it makes little difference tbh.

It is, although i tend to just whack them both up, if it's unstable, give it more voltage, if it's not, give it more fsb until it is, THEN whack up the voltage.

You would have a hard job upping the multi, it's locked on 99% of P4s.

:)
 
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Jestergt said:
why isnt the PI better?

i get 31 @2.9 with a 3700+

Because P4's are soooo weak at some things, but very strong at others, hmm, just like AMD's.

It's mainly my pap memory that was to blame for the Spi time, it's only wee Adata PC3200, bless it.
 
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4GhzSuperPI.jpg


Drazic did it.

Okay his timing was shocking but he ran a 5:4 divider and was using AMD RAM as to INTEL ram like he did end up doing.

So yes it can be done but you have to know what ya doing to do it
 
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Hi all

just noticed i have exact same chip as one shown in Bundles post 3ghz p4, and i am interested to know whot board u are using/or could recomend as i am thinkin of trying some overclockin myself .I need to get a new mobo as my chip sits inside a dell pc and as u proberly know dell's dont overclock :( very easy if at all.

any help would be greatly appreciated
 
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BISH422 said:
Hi all

just noticed i have exact same chip as one shown in Bundles post 3ghz p4, and i am interested to know whot board u are using/or could recomend as i am thinkin of trying some overclockin myself .I need to get a new mobo as my chip sits inside a dell pc and as u proberly know dell's dont overclock :( very easy if at all.

any help would be greatly appreciated

That was an MSI 865PE neo2 platinum edition (RIP) but there are much better boards out there, try to get hold of an Asus P4P800/P4S800 or an Abit IC7 of some veriety, these are your best boards for S478 intels.
 
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Excuse my ignorance (again) but what does PI stand for please?

I settled for a 3.2 extreme edition. Without any OC'ing it beats my 3.0 OC'd northwood (3.7GHz) in the benchmark tests :)

So that's cool, probably due to the extra cache (and lack of errors going on?)

The extreme edition doesn't seem very happy to overclock though.. it'll only reaches 238 FSB and then it's unstable thereafter. Raising the voltage slightly doesnt seem to help at all.

Are extreme editions generally less friendly to overclock?

- Toff.
 
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Bundles said:
That was an MSI 865PE neo2 platinum edition (RIP) but there are much better boards out there, try to get hold of an Asus P4P800/P4S800 or an Abit IC7 of some veriety, these are your best boards for S478 intels.

thx for the reply , i shall keep my eyes open for 1 of these boards. Then will be back in touch for some advice on overclockin it

thx again
 

daz

daz

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Toff said:
Excuse my ignorance (again) but what does PI stand for please?

Pi, as in the mathematical constant - the ratio of a circle's circumfrence to its diameter. Pi is an irrational number, which means it has no end - and infinite number of decimal places. This program calculates pi to a specified number of decimal places using a certain algorithm.
 
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Toff said:
Excuse my ignorance (again) but what does PI stand for please?

I settled for a 3.2 extreme edition. Without any OC'ing it beats my 3.0 OC'd northwood (3.7GHz) in the benchmark tests :)

So that's cool, probably due to the extra cache (and lack of errors going on?)

The extreme edition doesn't seem very happy to overclock though.. it'll only reaches 238 FSB and then it's unstable thereafter. Raising the voltage slightly doesnt seem to help at all.

Are extreme editions generally less friendly to overclock?

- Toff.

It has 2Mb catch dude, thats why it'll be tons faster

It should clock by a milestone being a Galantic core

What volts you pushing?

You set your ram to the slackest and hihest vdim and then clocked?

Oh and what bord too
 
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Siders77 said:
It has 2Mb catch dude, thats why it'll be tons faster

It should clock by a milestone being a Galantic core

What volts you pushing?

You set your ram to the slackest and hihest vdim and then clocked?

Oh and what bord too

Hi,

At the standard voltage (1.55v) it will run stably until 238FSB. I've tried pushing the voltage upto 1.625v but it's still unstable past anything over 238FSB (too chicken to raise the voltage any further! - the water cooling is working well, but I don't want to nuke the CPU with too much voltage!)

The ram is OCZ 4000, so it's actually running below-spec (500MHz native). Should I still slacken off the timings?

I'm loving overclocking - good job you guys are here to help :)

- Toff.
 
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