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#89 |
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Oct 2007
Manchester, UK
135710 Posts |
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#90 |
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Dec 2010
Monticello
111000000112 Posts |
I got to do some other things before I bring up yet another 'puter...idea had been to put the sandy bridge side-by-side the AMD 6 core and compare. I'll wait until march....
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#91 | |
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"James Heinrich"
May 2004
ex-Northern Ontario
23·149 Posts |
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#92 |
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Dec 2010
Monticello
111000000112 Posts |
I'm not above being a mersenne-airy myself. Therefore, if those other things get done, I think there's a sandy bridge in my future, wondering how hard it would be to set a GTX460 in it and get work out of it, too, probably under Xubuntu 10.10. I'd been hoping for a price break due to the SATA bug, but it looks like not.
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#93 | |
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Sep 2010
Annapolis, MD, USA
2758 Posts |
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#94 | |
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Aug 2002
North San Diego County
12558 Posts |
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#95 |
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Mar 2003
Melbourne
5×103 Posts |
Found out a problem with my machine.
During 25.11 testing, the voltage drops about 0.10V or so (hard to see exact figure as it reboots shortly after that). And hence the PC blue screens after that. Similarly with the other test I did. (4.5GHz 26.5.2). Only difference is when. Enabling Vdroop to level2, kept the voltage within a tighter bounds (0.03V). Voltage now increases with load and increases slightly. Without Vdroop the CPU voltage was decreasing due to load. (gradually and during the load, take away load - voltage went up) The PC survived @4.8GHz with Vdroop-2 for at least 3hrs or so before blue screen. Dropping to 4.5GHz the machine appears to be more stable. Now it's lasted 12+hrs (torture test started 7:30am, it's now 8:10pm). No reported errors so far. From reading around overclocking forums, 4.5GHz seems pretty common as a 24/7 overclock. So I think it's fairly stable now. Anyone got any ideas how long I should leave the torture test go for before putting this machine to work? -- Craig |
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#96 |
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Oct 2007
Manchester, UK
25158 Posts |
From what I remember of the previous i7s, enabling that option isn't recommended. Yes it means you get a higher voltage under load, but when the load is suddenly removed, it can't react fast enough and you get a large momentary spike in voltage.
Possibly things have changed since the last generation, but it's certainly something I'd recommend checking up on. |
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#97 |
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Just call me Henry
"David"
Sep 2007
Cambridge (GMT/BST)
588710 Posts |
Is raising the voltage permanently not an option?
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#98 |
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Mar 2003
Melbourne
10038 Posts |
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#99 | |
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"James Heinrich"
May 2004
ex-Northern Ontario
D6316 Posts |
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![]() @KingKurly: your benchmark(s) would also be welcome, you could post here, or in the Perpetual Benchmark Thread or just email to me. |
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