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Overclocking MachSpeed Board
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AfterDawn Addict
23 product reviews
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21. October 2007 @ 13:29 |
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I have a Machspeed PT88AS Motherboard that I would like to overclock. I have a Celeron D 2.93 Ghz inside which I know can hit 3GHZ+. The problem is, if I overclock it on this motherboard it either fails at POST or the performance is worse using SUPER_PI. The only option in the motherboard is to adjust the FSB and it has no option to adjust the CPU Voltage. My temps right now are about 88-90F idle so its not a question of cooling. I have a XION 500W PSU (dont know if that could be a problem) Does anybody know why I cant overclock? BTW, the motherboard box showed a picture of a Windows Voltage adjustment utility (think its called micro adjustment) that the motherboard did not come with and when I called MachSpeed they told me that that product was discontinued. Isn't that false advertisement?
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AfterDawn Addict
4 product reviews
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21. October 2007 @ 15:47 |
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I'll have to be straight up with you here. Both your power supply and motherboard simply aren't cut out for overclocking, and given the budget of your other parts, I doubt the RAM is either.
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AfterDawn Addict
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21. October 2007 @ 18:06 |
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I know that the RAM Inside my computer isn't the best but I know it will overclock. I have 1GB (2x512MB) Ultra DDR RAM with Heatspreader. With a new PSU could I get it to overclock to atlest 3GHz? Is there any 3rd party utility that would help me overclock or adjust the voltage on this? I'm planning on getting a PD with mobo to upgrade this but before I do that I would like to see how overclocking goes. A new mobo with PD means I would need DDR2 RAM, PCI-E Graphics and a new PSU.
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AfterDawn Addict
2 product reviews
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21. October 2007 @ 21:07 |
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What do you mean by PD? If you mean Pentium D then do yourself a favor and don't get one.
BTW I doubt you are going to get real performance gains going up that much, so just let it lie, and upgrade to a Core 2 later on to see some REAL overclocking.
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AfterDawn Addict
23 product reviews
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21. October 2007 @ 21:35 |
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Yea, i meant Pentium D. and I wanna save money and just get one of those for now or an AMD because I already have a Core2 @2.00 GHz with 2GB RAM in a laptop. I am also building a C2D system for a friend and I would like to know the best bang for the buck processor with a motherboard that overclockes excellently and thats SLI Capable.
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AfterDawn Addict
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21. October 2007 @ 21:48 |
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Well you certainly wont be getting the best bang for buck with a Pentium D. If you are looking for something cheaper look at the Pentium Dual-Cores. They are based on the Core 2 architecture.
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AfterDawn Addict
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22. October 2007 @ 09:00 |
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Indeed. Athlon64 X2s are really cheap, as are the new pentium dual cores, given how good value they are, I wouldn't pay any more than small change for a Pentium D.
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AfterDawn Addict
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22. October 2007 @ 09:57 |
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Originally posted by sammorris: Indeed. Athlon64 X2s are really cheap, as are the new pentium dual cores, given how good value they are, I wouldn't pay any more than small change for a Pentium D.
So your saying that the Pentium D is a small change over the Celeron D? I might just stick with my Celeron because paired with an ATI 9800 PRO, its a great gamer. It runs Halo 2 on XP Fine.
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AfterDawn Addict
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22. October 2007 @ 10:05 |
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The Pentium D is miles better than a Celeron D, but any other dual core processor is miles better than the Pentium D. You say the Celeron D is a great gamer, whilst it obviously serves your purposes well, once you upgrade you'll think otherwise. Try playing Supreme Commander with that CPU.
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AfterDawn Addict
23 product reviews
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22. October 2007 @ 16:06 |
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Well, with the amount of time I have on my hands, I don't really get to play games and when I do, I also have a Pentium 4 @ 3.6 GHz with a 6800 and 1GB RAM which I could also use. I just wanted to overclock this one because it is the one I have in my room and I don't use my laptop (C2D 2.00 GHz, 2GB, ATIx1400) for gaming.
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AfterDawn Addict
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22. October 2007 @ 17:46 |
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To be quite honest, your laptop would be almost as good for gaming!
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AfterDawn Addict
23 product reviews
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22. October 2007 @ 18:01 |
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Is the video card in my laptop good enough to game with? I have never had the time or enthusiasm to look up all the specs of it. I might just end up hooking it up to the monitor in my room and using an external HD with games on it. I really never liked gaming on a laptop because of the heat it produces and because of the laptop controllers but I could always use my wireless mouse/kb.
This message has been edited since posting. Last time this message was edited on 22. October 2007 @ 18:04
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AfterDawn Addict
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22. October 2007 @ 18:03 |
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It's not great, but it's not loads better than a 6800, it can play almost every game out there to some degree. Your laptop has a far better CPU, so you'll probably do alright.
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AfterDawn Addict
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22. October 2007 @ 18:09 |
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How much do clock speeds matter in determining how good a video card is. I know my Nvidia 6800 has a clock speed of 350 core x 900 memory o'clocked to 400x1020. I found out with the ATI utility that my ATI has 256MB of hypermemory with 432 core clock and 396 memory clock.
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AfterDawn Addict
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22. October 2007 @ 18:12 |
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Atitool shows you the pre-DDR speed of the RAM, so it'll actually be 792Mhz.
The clocks are kind of important for those older cards. I'm not saying the laptop will be better, but it won't be much worse.
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AfterDawn Addict
23 product reviews
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22. October 2007 @ 19:56 |
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AfterDawn Addict
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22. October 2007 @ 21:07 |
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That's because half of it is onboard GDDR3, and the other half it nicks from your system, so if you have DDR1 it's going to be DDR1/GDDR3, if you have DDR2, then it'll be DDR2/GDDR3.
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AfterDawn Addict
23 product reviews
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22. October 2007 @ 21:40 |
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I have DDR2 Memory. So, in the best you could say, how much better/worse is the ATI X1400 then the Nvidia 6800 GT? Are my final clocks with my memory configuration 432 core by 792 memory? If I was to run, say Need For Speed Carbon or any other intense game, which computer would run it better, graphics wise? And which computer would be the best overall for gaming from:
E1505/C2D 2GHz/2GB DDR2/120GB SATA/15.4 Glossy (1280x800)/X1400/Intel Pro Wireless/Bluetooth/XP MCE2005 (Service tag 9HRN4C1 to check advanced specs)
XPS Gen 3/P4 HT 3.6GHz/1GB DDR2/250GB SATA/20.1 Widescreen (1920x1050)/XP PRO (Service tag CLJMS51 to check advanced specs)
Check advanced specs:
http://support.dell.com/support/topics/g...c=us&l=en&s=gen
and go to Original System Configuration.
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AfterDawn Addict
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22. October 2007 @ 22:38 |
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The laptop has by far the better CPU, the graphics performance is probably indifferent. You will of course have a lower resolution with the laptop, but then that'll make the games run better. Having 2GB of RAM seals the deal as it being the better gamer.
The resolution of your desktop monitor is very likely to be 1680x1050 by the way, not 1920x1050.
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AfterDawn Addict
23 product reviews
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23. October 2007 @ 10:09 |
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Originally posted by sammorris:
The resolution of your desktop monitor is very likely to be 1680x1050 by the way, not 1920x1050.
Yea, thats it. I was just tired when I typed in the resolution and I was typing it in from my memory. So, now, If I was to upgrade the RAM in the XPS to 3GB (buy another 2x1GB Sticks because they are so cheap) would that make it perform a little better with games?
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AfterDawn Addict
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23. October 2007 @ 16:03 |
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Perhaps, but the laptop still has a far better CPU.
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AfterDawn Addict
23 product reviews
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23. October 2007 @ 20:40 |
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Now, I have the Dell Inspiron E1505 Laptop. I use the program I8KfanGUI to monitor the CPU temps, HD temps, GPU Temp, etc. One feature of this program is that it tells me the CPU speed that the laptop is currently running at. If I ran my computer on battery, I8KfanGUI reports my CPU speed at 1997-2000 MHz but if I right click on my computer and go to properties, it shows me that its running at 997 MHz. Which should I trust? Is there any program that enables me to turn on and off stepspeed whenever I want?
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AfterDawn Addict
2 product reviews
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23. October 2007 @ 20:56 |
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Not program, but you might want to look in your BIOS. My advice is, keep it on. It will speed up when you need it to. I use C1E on my desktop, which does the same thing as speedstep, just that it ups the multiplier faster.
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AfterDawn Addict
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23. October 2007 @ 20:59 |
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So, don't trust the program I8KfanGUI and trust what My Computer says? Being a Dell computer, the BIOS is really limited and doesn't tell me my CPU temp or speed.
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AfterDawn Addict
2 product reviews
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23. October 2007 @ 21:13 |
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If you click on properties, in My Computer, you can see the actual speed. First it will tell you the rated speed, and then the actual speed. Look in the red box, my rated speed is 2.13 Ghz, but I'm running at 3.2.

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