Originally posted by: Accord99
Start with these conservative memory timings:
http://i134.photobucket.com/albums/q117/mikepee/NorthBridge.jpg
Make sure to disable Static Read Control
In JumperFree, set your CPU freqency to 400 and DRAM frequency to DDR2-800.
2.8GHz shouldn't require additional CPU voltage, and 400MHz FSB shouldn't require an increase in NB/FSB/chipset voltages.
Originally posted by: myocardia
You should be trying 401 Mhz FSB, not 400. 400 uses a lower strap, and is much harder to achieve than 401. Also, you'll need to raise your vdimm .1v higher, most likely.
Originally posted by: myocardia
You should be trying 401 Mhz FSB, not 400. 400 uses a lower strap, and is much harder to achieve than 401. Also, you'll need to raise your vdimm .1v higher, most likely.
Originally posted by: Yoxxy
Depending on which set you got I assume they are rated at 2.1. That is the lowest I have seen from G.Skill PC2-6400. It is possible there is 2.0. I would run at 2.0. The bios voltage is not that important. My Asus Striker goes to 3.425v on DDR2 voltage, same for the upcoming Asus Commander . 2.1v will be easily handled by all dimms.
Originally posted by: Yoxxy
Depending on which set you got I assume they are rated at 2.1. That is the lowest I have seen from G.Skill PC2-6400. It is possible there is 2.0. I would run at 2.0. The bios voltage is not that important. My Asus Striker goes to 3.425v on DDR2 voltage, same for the upcoming Asus Commander . 2.1v will be easily handled by all dimms.
Originally posted by: Icepick
KK, I have the exact same motherboard, memory and CPU as you and I'm able to hit 2.8GHz effortlessly. One thing to keep in mind is that Vdroop on this motherboard is .07V and is pretty high. What this means is that whatever Vcore you set in BIOS, your readings from Windows will be .07V lower.
Your memory voltage is set higher than it needs to be. It only needs 1.9V to run stable at DDR2800 5-5-5-15. Lower it to 1.9V and manually set your RAM timings to 5-5-5-15 in BIOS.
Keep FSB to 401 as myocardia already pointed out.
Set VCore to 1.3625V. When I do this I get between 1.28 and 1.30V reported in CPU-Z and the ASUS AI utility in Windows. That is all I needed to run Orthos small FFT and Blend tests stable for 24 hours.
I included several BIOS settings for you to check below. This is what my board is currently set to. As always with overclocking - your mileage may vary but, this will give you a place to start. If, after confirming your BIOS settings you continue to have issues then run memtest86 for at least an hour. If you get errors with memtest at 5-5-5-15, DDR2800, 1.9V then your memory is most likely defective and is holding back your overclock. If your memory passes memtest86 then try bumping your VCore up in small increments.
Advanced Settings
DRAM Frequency: set it to run 1:1
PCI-E Frequency: 100
PCI Clock Synchronization Mode: lock this in at 33.33MHz
Spread Spectrum: Disabled
CPU VCore Voltage: 1.3625V (It reads 1.28V in Windows)
CPU Configuration:
Modify Ration Support: enabled
Ratio CMOS Setting: 7
C1E Support: disabled
Max CPUID Value Limit: disabled
Vanderpool: disabled
CPU TM Function: Enabled
Execute Disable Bit: Enabled
Northbridge Chipset Config
Mem remap= disabled
dram timing by SPD: disabled
latency: 5
RAS to CAS delay: 5
precharge: 5
activate to precharge: 15
write recovery: 6
DRAM TRFC: 42
Originally posted by: Yoxxy
I think I would download the memtest ISO. It is possible you just have bad ram.