Originally posted by: tenax
Originally posted by: bryanW1995
Originally posted by: tenax
it's the abit ip35-pro, revision 1, using the 2nd latest beta bios available for it (last official was not penryn quad compatible) so i use revision 16 b09. the basic specs on my system otherwise are:
penryn quad 9450 rev B1 (Engineering sample revision)
vid of 1.018
4 gigs g.skill 8500 memory (4 x 1 gig)
i am using an enzotech extreme cooler with variable speed scythe 120mm fan and mx2 paste
hey, where did you get your beta bios? I'm going home tonight and want to update to the beta bios in preparation for the (supposed) arrival of an x3350 from moogr.com in the next week.
it's available here, bryan:
http://forum.abit-usa.com/showthread.php?t=124502
go down the page and you'll find 2 of the 16 versions..otherwise, you'll have to dig through that thread a bit to or try a search of b09 or b10 and you'll find the newer ones. i'm b09 is better than b10. also, you the bios doesn't come with the flash file so you need to take the one from the 14 bios and edit the ini or whatever it is in the file page and rename the bios so it's a .bin extension, and you call it 14, rather than 16b09 so the flash program sees it. my explanation may not be the best..sorry..there are lots of tips on how to do this at that thread if you need it and lots of good help to be found there.
Originally posted by: lopri
If your boards support VTT/GTL value selection, do take advantage of it. Quad-core overclocking is all about those little tiny signal voltages. I also learned the oft-observed huge difference of temps between cores are partly dependent on GTL value. Once you find the right GTL values for FSB and NB, things get whole lot easier.
Originally posted by: tenax
good screenie to be had here from another guy with one:
http://www.hardforum.com/showt...2289565#post1032289565
I gotta go to bed now so just a couple pics for now.Originally posted by: bryanW1995
what are vtt/gtL? I think that I've seen them lurking around in the bios but I've always been too scared to mess with them.
Originally posted by: bryanW1995
so, um, heh heh, I updated the bios and, um, the computer won't boot now. I got lazy and used the windoze abit flash menu b/c I've done it before without incident. I'm getting a C1 error upon boot (memory detect). Am I screwed permanently or is there a fix for this?
Originally posted by: bryanW1995
Originally posted by: tenax
good screenie to be had here from another guy with one:
http://www.hardforum.com/showt...2289565#post1032289565
I finally broke down and registered for hocp forums thanks to you tenax! I want to post on that link to see if any of the other ip35 pro owners have had bios issues, too. Please post that question if you get this before I get "added". Hopefully kyle doesn't remember some of my video posts...
Originally posted by: lopri
I gotta go to bed now so just a couple pics for now.Originally posted by: bryanW1995
what are vtt/gtL? I think that I've seen them lurking around in the bios but I've always been too scared to mess with them.
For example, while I was trying to lower my vCore I fiddled with the GTL values of vTT/vFSB as well as vNB. See what's happened in the pics below. (red rectengles)
A lot of boards seem to set the GTL level too low or too high, causing instability, no POST, high temps, or huge discrepancy between cores. Calibrating the GTL values per core seems to be the key for quad-core clocking.
Originally posted by: Foxery
Originally posted by: bryanW1995
so, um, heh heh, I updated the bios and, um, the computer won't boot now. I got lazy and used the windoze abit flash menu b/c I've done it before without incident. I'm getting a C1 error upon boot (memory detect). Am I screwed permanently or is there a fix for this?
Did you reset the CMOS after flashing? I just updated my IP35-Pro to version 16b09 today, and I had to flip the little switch under the keyboard port before it would POST. Everything's been peachy since then.
Originally posted by: bryanW1995
you probably don't need 2.2v, if the ram will even do that for any length of time before going kaput. If you do up the vdimm that much then you probably need to put a fan on the ram to keep it cool. try going to 6-6-6-18 with 1.8v at 450fsb. run memtest for 5-10 minutes just to see if it's relatively stable. If so, then tighten up the timings gradually and or slowly increase the vdimm as necessary.
Originally posted by: bryanW1995
if you couldn't get it to 450fsb at 2.2v then that's a problem
Originally posted by: Tutto
I have a q9300 C0 that runs 3.6GHz with 1.51 vcore totally stable
Originally posted by: GarfieldtheCat
Originally posted by: Tutto
I have a q9300 C0 that runs 3.6GHz with 1.51 vcore totally stable
:shocked:
Originally posted by: fleshconsumed
Originally posted by: GarfieldtheCat
Originally posted by: Tutto
I have a q9300 C0 that runs 3.6GHz with 1.51 vcore totally stable
:shocked:
That is WAY too much.