Recommended Posts

Hey all running a G0 Stepping Q6600 on stock intel air, in an Antec 900, I've currently got it on 3.4ghz ( 378mhz x9, ram 1:1:20 DDR2 907 ) with CPU Core at 1.44v and ram at 2.1v. This runs stable, when I up to 400mhz X9 and I drop the ram to 1:1:00 800mhz DDR2, and up the CPU Core to 1.47 the system will boot but fail a 3dMark06 test on the cpu section, and won't run any game stable for more than ten minutes.

Coretemp shows the idle temp to be around 40c ( helps having the Antec 900 ) and max temperature on the logs was 61c.

Running this on an Abit IP35 Pro, powered by a Corsair HX620. And the ram is Corsair XMS2 DDR 800mhz 2x2048MB.

Any tips on how I can obtain 3.6ghz?

Link to comment
https://www.neowin.net/forum/topic/648674-advice-on-hitting-36ghz/
Share on other sites

Well, the vcores set in the BIOS will not represent true voltages because of vdroop. If your IP35 Pro has massive vdroop that could affect your stability, but I think the vNB is slightly more important for now.

Right I am looking at the bios on my gaming system now.

CPU Core Voltage is at 1.44v

DDR2 Voltage is at 2.100v

CPU VTT 1.2V Voltage is at 1.20v

MCH 1.25V is at 1.25V

ICH 1.05V is at 1.05V

ICHIO is at 1.5v

DDR2 Reference Voltage is at 0%

CPU GTLREF0&2 67%

CPU GTLREF 1&3 67%

Don't know if most of that means anything to you?

Try giving the MCH a bump in voltage (that's your northbridge's voltage setting). Quads are pretty hard on the memory controller, so that's why a lot of them have been FSB limited. Bumping the voltage to the northbridge assists in pushing the FSB further.

You can really look up what they mean in your motherboard manual (save the last three things, those kind of require googling).

Got a BSOD during testing :/

edit: core temp logs show a massive 74c high across the cores... so dropping back to 3.4 for now.

You may want to get an aftermarket cooler if you're going to overclock a quad like that. Try something like the thermalright Ultra 120 Extreme or the Xigmatech s1283. To go higher you need to figure out why it's unstable. First thing to do is take the cpu out of the equation and lower your cpu multiplier and set your fsb to 400 and see if it's stable. If it is stable your cpu didn't have enough voltage or its just getting way too hot. I'd go with it being too hot since you're using the stock cooler and pumping a lot of extra voltage into it.

First thing to do is take the cpu out of the equation and lower your cpu multiplier and set your fsb to 400 and see if it's stable. If it is stable your cpu didn't have enough voltage or its just getting way too hot. I'd go with it being too hot since you're using the stock cooler and pumping a lot of extra voltage into it.

Oh duh, how did I forget about this? Do this, I do it while I test for overclocks...yet I always fail to mention it to other people. -_-

As for the clocks looking funny, CPU-Z might be reading Speedstep's dropping of your multiplier.

Right I realized something important, I had NOT turned off the damn speedstep in the bios, and upon booting up at 3.4ghz without the speedstep I was pushing 54c IDLE!, I've dropped back to 3.2ghz which I know runs a 1.33v, and will sort out a much better cooler.

Whats easy to fit as in the likes of the stock one?

If you're doing heavy overclocking with a quad, you'll want something beefier than a simple drop in. With that said, the Xigmatek S1283 (as mentioned by khaydin) comes close to the TRUE in performance while maintain the push pin design and being cheaper (37 + 7 dollars for retention bracket). Most people buy the retention bracket because they don't like the push pin design, but the retention bracket isn't required. If you don't want to get it, then you can get it for 32 at mwave.

If you can't get your hands on the S1283, then I'd look at the Zerotherm NV120 and Noctua NH-U12P with the TRUE not really being in play because of its price.

edit: errr, disregard the prices, I forgot not everyone's from the US. -_-

Also, you are only testing this in 3dMark06? This program tests the performance of your system, not it's stability. I would use ORTHOS or Prime95 to test your processor for an extended period of time (usually 8 hours is recommended). I don't think you are going to be as stable as you think because your processor will be getting hotter than with 3dMark06.

1:1 ratio is ideal, but in real world performance you won't notice a difference. In a benchmark you might see slight gains in running a 1:1 instead of 5:6.

Most of the people around here run a 1:1 though (just take a look @ the Overclocking Database thread)

https://www.neowin.net/forum/index.php?showtopic=642085

1:1 ratio is ideal, but in real world performance you won't notice a difference. In a benchmark you might see slight gains in running a 1:1 instead of 5:6.

Most of the people around here run a 1:1 though (just take a look @ the Overclocking Database thread)

https://www.neowin.net/forum/index.php?showtopic=642085

just because of easier time with OCing in 1:1 as you dont have to worry that it is possibly that the ram crush the pc cause of overclocking

This topic is now closed to further replies.
  • Recently Browsing   0 members

    • No registered users viewing this page.
  • Posts

    • Microsoft's Copilot Cowork now generally available with usage-based billing by Pradeep Viswanathan Back in March, Microsoft first revealed Copilot Cowork, a new agentic AI experience in Microsoft 365 Copilot through which users can assign tasks to AI to complete in the background. After testing the service with a limited set of customers in Research Preview for a few weeks, Microsoft announced the general availability of Copilot Cowork to customers in the Frontier program on March 30. Today, Microsoft announced the general availability of Copilot Cowork worldwide for Microsoft 365 Copilot customers. The company also highlighted that Cowork became the fastest-growing feature in the history of its Frontier program. Unlike regular Copilot Chat, Copilot Cowork can run complex, long-running, multi-tool tasks from start to finish in the cloud by using organizational context through Work IQ. When compared to Claude Cowork, Microsoft claims that Copilot Cowork will be 30% to 40% cheaper on average with its Microsoft 365 connector. For now, Copilot Cowork runs on Anthropic models, including Opus 4.8 and Sonnet 4.6. However, Frontier customers can now use GPT-5.5. Microsoft also announced Cowork 1, a secure fine-tuned model coming in the next few weeks, which is designed to handle everyday Copilot tasks at a lower cost. To access Copilot Cowork, a Microsoft 365 Copilot user subscription is required. Usage is billed separately through Copilot Credits, based on model use, context retrieval, tool calls, and runtime. Pay-as-you-go pricing is set at $0.01 per Copilot Credit. To offer IT teams full control over usage costs, Microsoft provides spending limits, usage alerts, user-level controls, reporting, and prepaid usage plans for organizations. Usage-based billing begins today. However, Frontier customers who used Cowork between March 30 and June 16 will not be billed until July 1, 2026. The Microsoft 365 Copilot app now includes a toggle to enter the full Cowork experience. Microsoft is also adding partner plugins, with Enosix, Harvey, LSEG, Miro, monday.com, Moody’s, Morningstar, S&P Global Energy, and TeamsMaestro available now. Adobe, Atlassian, Box, Canva, Databricks, and others are coming soon.
    • With Nova enabled I am not seeing a difference with compactmode.show?
    • HOLY THREAD REVIVAL   But yes, look for browser.nova.enabled and set it to true
    • 5-year subscription to AdGuard VPN price-dropped now 90% off by Steven Parker Today's highlighted deal comes via our Apps + Software section of the Neowin Deals store, where you can save 88% off a 5-year subscription to AdGuard VPN. In the digital age where internet privacy is paramount, AdGuard VPN emerges as an essential tool. This virtual private network (VPN) is your encrypted gateway to the internet, helping your data stay secure and your online activities remain private, regardless of your location. More than just a privacy tool, AdGuard VPN is a robust solution packed with features that cater to a variety of internet needs. Why AdGuard VPN subscription deal over other VPNs: Exhaustive List of Locations: With 60+ locations available worldwide, you have the freedom to connect from anywhere you want, effectively bypassing geographically restricted content. Check complete list of servers here. Advanced Security Protocol: AdGuard VPN uses its own security protocol, guaranteeing a faster and safer VPN connection. This means you can browse, stream, and download with peace of mind knowing your data is secure. Zero-Logging Policy: Rest assured, your personal data is not collected and your internet traffic stays private at all times, thanks to AdGuard's strict zero-logging policy. Simultaneous Connections: Connect up to 10 devices simultaneously, providing protection for all your devices under just one account. Trusted Developer: AdGuard is a renowned name in the world of computer security, bringing their expertise and commitment to privacy and security to their VPN service. What You Get: Up to 10 devices connected simultaneously All locations Light-speed servers Unlimited data No logs policy Trusted developer Available on all platforms Privacy Created by a team from Russia, AdGuard software Limited is headquartered in Limassol, Cyprus. While the country does follow European privacy laws, it's not part of the 5/9/14 Eyes Alliance. Adguard may not properly work in China. Good to know Length of access: 5 years This plan is only available to new users Redemption deadline: redeem your code within 30 days of purchase Device per license: 10 Access options: desktop & mobile Updates included 5- years of AdGuard VPN normally costs $359.40 without discounts, but it can be yours just $39.97, that's a saving of $324.43 (90%) off. For full terms, specifications, and license info please click the link below. Get this 5-year AdGuard VPN deal for just $34.97 (was $359.40) Although priced in U.S. dollars, this deal is available for digital purchase worldwide. Support queries If you have queries or need support for any of the Neowin Deals, please use the contact form here. Neowin Deals are managed and sold by StackCommerce who represent Neowin on an affiliate basis. Why we post these deals We post these because we earn commission on each sale so as not to rely solely on advertising, which many of our readers block. It all helps toward paying staff reporters, servers and hosting costs. So for those that keep moaning and complaining, be thankful we're still online for you to even do that. Other ways to support Neowin Whitelist Neowin by not blocking our ads Create a free member account to see fewer ads Make a donation to support our day to day running costs Subscribe to Neowin - for $14 a year, or $28 a year for an ad-free experience Disclosure: Neowin benefits from revenue of each sale made through our branded deals site powered by StackCommerce.
    • KillerPDF 1.5.1 by Razvan Serea KillerPDF is a lightweight, portable PDF editor for Windows built for users who want full control without subscriptions, installers, or telemetry. It runs as a single executable, making it ideal for USB use and field work. You can view PDFs with smooth PDFium rendering, navigate quickly with thumbnails, zoom, and shortcuts, and reorganize pages using drag-and-drop. It supports merging multiple PDFs, splitting documents, and extracting selected pages. KillerPDF also allows inline text editing with font matching to preserve the original layout, plus annotations like text boxes, freehand drawing, highlights, and reusable signatures. You can search full text, copy content easily, and print documents with flattened annotations. Designed as a free and open alternative to bloated PDF tools, it works fully offline on Windows 10/11 x64. No runtimes install. Everything needed is inside the EXE (targets .NET Framework 4.8, which ships with every supported Windows release). KillerPDF key features: High-quality PDF rendering via PDFium Edit PDF text inline (double-click to modify text) Page thumbnails and fast navigation with zoom and shortcuts Merge multiple PDFs into one Split PDFs and extract selected pages Drag-and-drop page reordering Font matching to preserve original document appearance Text boxes for notes Freehand drawing tools Highlight overlays with adjustable color, size, opacity Undo actions and clear per-page annotations Create, draw, and save reusable signatures Click-to-place signatures anywhere Full-text search with highlighted results Drag-select or Ctrl+A to copy text Print with annotations flattened Portable single-file app (~10 MB) No installer, no admin rights required No account, no telemetry KillerPDF 1.5.1 changelog: Performance Save Flattened PDF now uses multiple CPU cores. Page rasterization is parallelized (PNG encoding runs across cores; the PDFium render step stays serialized since the library isn't thread-safe), so large documents flatten significantly faster while the UI stays responsive (#68). Fixed PDFs that failed to open with "Unexpected EOF" now open (#72). The failure was PdfSharpCore's Flate inflater (SharpZipLib) rejecting the FlateDecode cross-reference stream on multi-revision PDFs - files that open fine in browsers, Acrobat, and Foxit. KillerPDF now detects this and re-opens the file losslessly through PDFium, preserving selectable text. Thanks to @javajon for the report and a detailed reproduction. Grid view renders every page. It was capped at the first 26 pages, so longer documents stopped loading partway through. Tiles also stream in progressively now instead of blocking until the whole document is rendered. Grid Ctrl+Scroll no longer reloads every page when the zoom is already at its limit and nothing would change. Removed a stray horizontal scrollbar (a thin green line) that could appear across the bottom of grid view. Files on UNC / network shares (including the WSL \\wsl$ filesystem) are copied locally before opening, avoiding partial-read failures on network filesystems. Changed Minimum zoom lowered from 10% to 5%, so grid view can pack more columns (helpful for wide/landscape pages) and single-page view can zoom out further. Download: KillerPDF 1.5.1 | 6.3 MB (Open Source) Link: KillerPDF Home Page | Github | Screenshot Get alerted to all of our Software updates on Twitter at @NeowinSoftware
  • Recent Achievements

    • One Year In
      Console General earned a badge
      One Year In
    • One Year In
      Twozo Technologies earned a badge
      One Year In
    • One Month Later
      Twozo Technologies earned a badge
      One Month Later
    • Week One Done
      Twozo Technologies earned a badge
      Week One Done
    • Veteran
      branfont went up a rank
      Veteran
  • Popular Contributors

    1. 1
      +primortal
      522
    2. 2
      +Edouard
      196
    3. 3
      PsYcHoKiLLa
      111
    4. 4
      Steven P.
      89
    5. 5
      Nick H.
      71
  • Tell a friend

    Love Neowin? Tell a friend!