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| Overclocking and Modding A haven for all you hardware Gurus who want to push it all to the MAX. |
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#1 |
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DriverHeaven Junior Member
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Max core voltage for AMD Athlon 64 3200+ Venice?
Hello,
I am overclocking my CPU, therefore, I need to know the maximum vcore I can safely use. AMD's official website sucks and I am unable to find the information. My CPU is AMD Athlon 64 3200+ (default 2000 MHz,200x10) and it has 512 kb cache, E6 stepping and uses 92nm technology. I am using vcore of 1.575 at the moment and my CPU is not stable at 2.40 GHz (240x10). My goal is 2.40 GHz right now. Thanks for your help!
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Just call me Kai
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#2 |
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HardwareHeaven Extreme Member
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Anything past stock voltage voids the warranty.
I would in no situation advise going past 1.6, asuming your temps are good. Personally, I probably wouldn't try past 1.5, and wouldn't run past 1.4 for 24/7 usage. Generally when I'm overclocking processors, I keep voltage at stock, and just take the frequency as far as it will go from there. edit: Those cpus generally reach a point where small MHz gains require greater and greater voltage increases to get stable, it generally isn't worth upping the voltage by 0.3v for an extra 200 MHz.
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-- Last edited by Zelig; Jan 17, 2008 at 04:44 PM. |
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#3 |
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HH's Tomboy
Join Date: Nov 2005
Location: Anywhere but in my house!
Posts: 776
Rep Power: 56 ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() |
Hello Kai,
There is no such thing as a maximum safe voltage. The only safe voltage is the stock voltage. All voltages higher than that will reduce the lifetime of your CPU...supposedly. A CPU will last for many years even at voltages much higher than stock when the cooling is adequate. In short, I'd try voltages up to 1.7V if I were you but watch your temps. Over 65C degrees at full load are not desirable. |
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#4 | |
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Member
Join Date: Mar 2003
Posts: 5,989
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Quote:
however, while the processor is overclocked, like suggested, keep checking the processor core temp, and try to keep the core temps at as low as possible and you should be okay. |
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#5 |
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...just bummin 'round
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Since your runnin at 240*10, what the situation with the RAM? is it 1-1 or is divider in use? did you lower the HT to 4X? could be a chipset voltage issue. BTW isnt the stock volt on a Venice 1.4 or 1.425. Just seems like alot of voltage for a 400MHz OC, Im betting you can lower the CPU voltage and tweak the RAM and chipset to get stable. Could be wrong though! LOL
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DriverHeaven Junior Member
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Hi,
Thanks for your replies. I have two pairs of PC 3200 400 MHz DDR ram in that PC and I think I am using 1:1 ratio. I am using Zalman CPU cooler called CNPS7000AlCu. The idle temp is around 32-34C and the load temp is something like +10-15C more. My PC did POST and boot and I launched 3DMark 05 and it was working fine until it started the CPU test. I saw actually no change between vcore 1.45 and 1.575 so I think the vcore is not the answer in here. I'll try to tighten or relax the RAM timings and see if they get it more stable. Unfortunately, I have no clues, which or whose memory sticks are those. I bought those two memory sticks of PC 3200 from a friend and I do not know the manufacturer. I saw a couple of posts here and there where they told they were able to reach 2.8 and some even 2.9 GHz on 3200+ Venice and with a aftermarket cooler. Also, do you think it could be an FSB hole? I had an FSB hole in my P5N-E and Q6600 so I was just wondering...
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Just call me Kai
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#7 | |
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HardwareHeaven Extreme Member
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Quote:
Don't be afraid of dropping the ram multiplier, internally, it's running on a divider from the total CPU speed, so there's no "real" multiplier. As such, there's no performance difference between running 1:1 and otherwise, if the ram is at the same frequency.
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#8 |
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...just bummin 'round
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yas yer best bet with the unmatched RAM for stability would not be to try to OC them but set the divider back to 166/333DDR, that way yur RAM will default to somewhere around 166 but the processor (the part where you overclock) will still be 200*X. you up the CPU bus (200) and the RAM follows but starts from 166.
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