Tom's Guide > Forum > Overclocking > Motherboards > Stuck Trying to Overclock i7 960 and Asus P6T Deluxe v2

Stuck Trying to Overclock i7 960 and Asus P6T Deluxe v2

Forum Overclocking : Motherboards - Stuck Trying to Overclock i7 960 and Asus P6T Deluxe v2

TomsGuide.com: Over 800,000 questions and answers to address all your high-tech questions. Sign up now! Its free!
Word :    Username :           
 

I have been spinning my wheels for a couple of days trying to get a stable overclock of my i7 960 in my Asus P6T Deluxe v2. Any suggestions would be appreciated. I've tried using the guides, but most don't match this motherboard or CPU. My efforts haven't allowed me to even increase from 3.2 to 4.0, let alone the 4.7 I had hoped for. I would even be willing to pay someone who would walk me through the process later today (Moday). Thanks!

Sponsored Links
Register or log in to remove.

Anyone who will accept a payment for a little advie is a douchebag.

anyhow, drop the ram down to 800mhz. Then just increase the base clock and raise the vcore when it becomes unstable.

When you get a to high vcore(1.3-1.35ish) then start raising the QPI vcore voltage when it becomes unstable.

Message quoted 1 times
Message edited by overshocked on 11-09-2009 at 11:44:33 AM
------------------------------ http://img191.imageshack.us/img191/885/14y1fuqvybiiwayab.gif
Reply to overshocked

you are trying to go from 3.2 to 4.0 ghz. What about the intermediate frequencies. Most chips cant even hit 4.0ghz with full stability what ever you do...
Try increasing 50 mhz each time and finding the best voltage for each. Jumping from 3.2 to 4.0 is not the correct way to overclock. Every chip is different and needs to be handled differently

Reply to slo

What kind of cooling are you using?

Reply to slo

I am using Arctic Silver with a Cooler Master V8. I'm worried I put too much on. At default I'm getting 41 degrees with the sides of my case off. But I don't think the instability has been due to heat. After I get stable settings, then I'll test for long term stability.

I was trying intermediate settings, but my goal was at least 4.0. After all, it seems people are getting that with a 920. If so, then shouldn't it be much easier for a 960?

Reply to dabesq

Here are my stock temps with the case open. The only BIOS changes were setting XMS to recognize my memory timings and lowering the DRAM bus voltage from 1.66 to 1.64. From rest to peak through one run (5 minutes) of Intel's Burn Test, my cores went 39->65, 35->62, 38->61, and 33->55.

Should I be worried about these temps, especially the large differences across cores? Should I remove and reapply the thermal paste? (If you know the HAF 932, V8, and P6T, you know what a PITA that is.)

Reply to dabesq

overshocked wrote :

Anyone who will accept a payment for a little advie is a douchebag.

anyhow, drop the ram down to 800mhz. Then just increase the base clock and raise the vcore when it becomes unstable.

When you get a to high vcore(1.3-1.35ish) then start raising the QPI vcore voltage when it becomes unstable.



Hey Overshocked, Thanks for replying. I would just note that I may need more than a little advice given the lack of success I had following your tutorial on my own, in part because the P6T has rather different options (or so it seems) and largely because I'm a newbie. I don't mind paying someone to walk me through a process like this when it is going to take more than a couple of minutes of their time. Imagine how much a "Geek Squad" would charge me -- if they even would do an overclock -- and how unhelpful it would likely be. You've had great success with OC'ing the 920. I was just hoping that the 960 would give me a head start. Best, Dabesq

Reply to dabesq

Whats the problem? You cant find the bclock or what?

------------------------------ http://img191.imageshack.us/img191/885/14y1fuqvybiiwayab.gif
Reply to overshocked

I found the bclock, but as you well know, overclocking involves a bit more than one number. First, with my motherboard, there are literally millions, if not billions, of potential combinations. Second, it could be extremely time consuming to determine the maximum OC for my gear--time I don't have. My goal is to get a good OC, consistent with the 80/20 rule--if you know what I mean. So, I don't think you have to be such an idiot as to not be able to find the bclock to be willing to compensate someone with lots of experience to speed up what can be a very time consuming process. I'm an expert in my own field and can quickly narrow down a nearly infinite number of option to a manageable number worth pursuing, and I can point out a problem/potential conflict that a newbie wouldn't recognize. I'd like to see if I can find similar assistance with this OC. That could be either live assistance or a good tutorial geared towards my motherboard and chip.

Reply to dabesq

just increase thebase clock and keep re-booting up after each 10 b-clock boost.

When windows wont boot up anymore because of a BSOD, then raise the vcore.

Continue the process until you hit 1.35-1.4 vcore, then continue boosting the base clock until you hit another BSOD then start increasing the QPI/uncore voltage.

------------------------------ http://img191.imageshack.us/img191/885/14y1fuqvybiiwayab.gif
Reply to overshocked

^ Is that enough info?

basically just steps 1,4,5, and 6 in my guide.

That should get you to a fairly high speed. But to add that extra 100mhz or so you will need to understand a bit more, like those settings in steps 2 and 3 of my guide. But they really dont help that much.

------------------------------ http://img191.imageshack.us/img191/885/14y1fuqvybiiwayab.gif
Reply to overshocked

Here's a i7 OC Guide specific to the P6T

http://vip.asus.com/forum/view.asp [...] uage=en-us

------------------------------ If a man speaks in the forest and no woman hears him, is he still wrong ?
Reply to JackNaylorPE

Thanks. What I really wish I could find is a cross between the Asus guide and overshocked's guide. But my system seems basically stable now at 4.0, up from 3.2, so I'll probably leave it there. The voltage is on the low end, but Real Temp 3.00 has one core peaking (briefly) at 80*C, so obviously don't want any higher temps.

Reply to dabesq

I read somewhere that you should first put AI Tuner thing on Auto, reboot, then manual and tweak. Apparently it helps because before doing that the max stable overclock they could get was 3.2ghz on a i7 920. After that 4Ghz. Try it. Worked for my i7 920 + p6t deluxe :)

Reply to mizzl

Thanks for the suggestion!

Reply to dabesq
Tom's Guide > Forum > Overclocking > Motherboards > Stuck Trying to Overclock i7 960 and Asus P6T Deluxe v2
Go to:

There are 16 identified and unidentified users. To see the list of identified users, Click here.

Google ads