BonzaiDuck
Lifer
- Jun 30, 2004
- 16,162
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When you run two instances of ORTHOS, does one of them seem to be "Paging" all the time? What's going on there?
Originally posted by: BonzaiDuck
Great! I very much appreciate your help. I don't know if you were following my thread about motherboard ducting, but I almost came unraveled in my enthusiasm at the discovery that I could get the same speeds at lower VCORE on the E6600 -- and with lower temperatures -- for all the arts-and-crafts foam-board tedium.
Now I've got the Q6600 installed, up and running, and SolMeister has me kicking myself, because customer reviews at NewEgg show that they're selling the G0 stepping all of a sudden. I got the B3 -- maybe that's what you have also.
I can't see how Everest Ultimate would report inaccurate temperatures, but this is just a baseline check to see how I'm doing.
Here's the frequency distribution of my 2xORTHOS temperatures for 1 hour, 16 minutes:
Q6600 @ 2.4 Ghz, 1.28V VCORE, baseline temperatures under 2xORTHOS load and 73F room ambient
This is the entire distribution of my temperatures sampled every 8-seconds over that time-period. Your range upper-bound gives me some encouragement for all the little pieces of foam I have to sweep off the carpet now . . . .
I guess I can continue to put water-cooling on the back burner for a while.
Did you notice a wider variation in the load temperatures while you ran ORTHOS at the higher clock settings? I'm going to bump it up to 1,333 Mhz before dinner -- probably without even dropping the multiplier to see how that goes.
Originally posted by: BonzaiDuck
But even so -- if it's copper and has heatpipes, it would promise to be more effective than the stock cooler.
Originally posted by: poco153
Hello All -
I have a Q6600 (the B3 stepping) coupled with some AS5 and a Thermalright Ultra-120 Extreme (the version with 6 heatpipes). It's been running fine and all, but I'm still hoping to overclock some. The Ultra-120 has a Scythe S-Flex 120mm fan on it because it seemed like a good balance between quiet and cool. I've been running the box at load for a good 8 hours now, and I'm noticing something odd: the nTune utility included with my motherboard (the eVga 680i SLI board) is reading the load temperature as 57C (which still seems a little high). Intel's Thermal Analysis Tool and CoreTemp both read the cores as 68/61/68/61 (0/1/2/3). I feel like this is way too hot, especially since Anandtech has gotten some serious overclockes on the higher-end C2Q chips with the same cooler. What is the thermal limit of these chips? Does it sound like I'm doing something wrong with my thermal paste application?
Thanks,
Originally posted by: poco153
adairusmc -
I dropped my voltage to 1.26250 in the BIOS, and my temps at load with stock speeds (2.4GHz) are still pretty high - 63/63/60/60 according to CoreTemp. I feel like this is quite toasty for stock speeds. Any thoughts as to what I can do to remedy it?
Originally posted by: poco153
adairusmc -
I dropped my voltage to 1.26250 in the BIOS, and my temps at load with stock speeds (2.4GHz) are still pretty high - 63/63/60/60 according to CoreTemp. I feel like this is quite toasty for stock speeds. Any thoughts as to what I can do to remedy it?
Originally posted by: adairusmc
You can try re-fitting your thermalright to see if you can get a tighter fit I suppose. I saw a think here somewhere where you can take a dime, or a quarter, and put it between the screw of the retention bracket and the block (on the top of the block, in the gap between the heatsink. You might have a loose connection on your thermalright (they are notorious for fitting a little loose sometimes).
Here is an illustration (taken from another thread here on the forum) - pic
As far as stock load temps, those do not look too terrible to me. With my 3Ghz overclock, I am hitting 69,69,67,66 with the same cooler (temps taken after 11 hours of dual Orthos). Maybe re-applying the thermal paste and making the cooler fit a little tighter will help.
Originally posted by: poco153
Originally posted by: adairusmc
You can try re-fitting your thermalright to see if you can get a tighter fit I suppose. I saw a think here somewhere where you can take a dime, or a quarter, and put it between the screw of the retention bracket and the block (on the top of the block, in the gap between the heatsink. You might have a loose connection on your thermalright (they are notorious for fitting a little loose sometimes).
Here is an illustration (taken from another thread here on the forum) - pic
As far as stock load temps, those do not look too terrible to me. With my 3Ghz overclock, I am hitting 69,69,67,66 with the same cooler (temps taken after 11 hours of dual Orthos). Maybe re-applying the thermal paste and making the cooler fit a little tighter will help.
I'm up for trying this out, and I greatly appreciate the help! One thing I must ask, though, is how likely am I to destroy something (I'm most worried about cracking the chip or the motherboard) by putting a coin under the bracket? If you could link me to the forum topic, I'd appreciate it (although I suppose I can google it too). The mount is pretty loose, I can rotate it very easily.
Another new-to-overclocking question - do I need to clean off and re-apply AS5 every time I pull the heatsink off?
Thanks,