guys , somebody of u is good on overclocking cpus , if u are please contact me , thanks a lot
ANRi
ask Uncle Google about overclocking ur own type of cpu, its not hard :)
Quote from: $nake on January 05, 2012, 15:30
ask Uncle Google about overclocking ur own type of cpu, its not hard :)
there is a reason why i posted here , I FUCKING SEARCHED GOOGLE , i only asked if there was anybody who knew , if u dont know FUCK OFF
Quote from: Brand New Name on January 05, 2012, 16:24
Quote from: $nake on January 05, 2012, 15:30
ask Uncle Google about overclocking ur own type of cpu, its not hard :)
there is a reason why i posted here , I FUCKING SEARCHED GOOGLE , i only asked if there was anybody who knew , if u dont know FUCK OFF
sure i know, but it depends of ur cpu avibility for overclocking and ur applications stuff for it.. maybe some included..
or is your CPU locked or BIOS
The best place for finding out is the manufacturer website or spec book. I for instance, I can overclock the CPU from my new PC using applications. But for the old PC, the settings were in the BIOS.
I never use applications to do it. I can overclock in BIOS and i can overclock my graphic cards in Ati control center
so you want to overclock your CPU? if you have a laptop or HP computer then it wont work cuz they have locked overclocking and also some CPU's are just locked.
also if you buy intel CPU later I suggest to pay a bit more for CPUs that has "K" marked after the model which means theres no locks and limits for overclocking.
Quote from: Dr_dog on January 06, 2012, 17:32
also if you buy intel CPU later I suggest to pay a bit more for CPUs that has "K" marked after the model which means theres no locks and limits for overclocking.
im thinking to change my AMD into an i7
Quote from: Brand New Name on January 06, 2012, 20:51
Quote from: Dr_dog on January 06, 2012, 17:32
also if you buy intel CPU later I suggest to pay a bit more for CPUs that has "K" marked after the model which means theres no locks and limits for overclocking.
im thinking to change my AMD into an i7
i7s are expensive. To be completely honest, AMD has a better processor for less. If you need help overclocking, I need this information:
Your power supply wattage (ex 1500w)
Your Processor WITH factory clock (ex 3.8ghz)
Your MOTHERBOARD Model
Your RAM information (clock speed, channels, kind ect)
How many other components are attached ect
nvm . on my actual on i wont overclock it.
ty guys
Quote from: Dan_Nobleman on January 06, 2012, 23:38
Quote from: Brand New Name on January 06, 2012, 20:51
Quote from: Dr_dog on January 06, 2012, 17:32
also if you buy intel CPU later I suggest to pay a bit more for CPUs that has "K" marked after the model which means theres no locks and limits for overclocking.
im thinking to change my AMD into an i7
i7s are expensive. To be completely honest, AMD has a better processor for less. If you need help overclocking, I need this information:
Your power supply wattage (ex 1500w)
Your Processor WITH factory clock (ex 3.8ghz)
Your MOTHERBOARD Model
Your RAM information (clock speed, channels, kind ect)
How many other components are attached ect
i7 are cheap here you get it for around 270€
Quote from: Dr_dog on January 07, 2012, 10:37
Quote from: Dan_Nobleman on January 06, 2012, 23:38
Quote from: Brand New Name on January 06, 2012, 20:51
Quote from: Dr_dog on January 06, 2012, 17:32
also if you buy intel CPU later I suggest to pay a bit more for CPUs that has "K" marked after the model which means theres no locks and limits for overclocking.
im thinking to change my AMD into an i7
i7s are expensive. To be completely honest, AMD has a better processor for less. If you need help overclocking, I need this information:
Your power supply wattage (ex 1500w)
Your Processor WITH factory clock (ex 3.8ghz)
Your MOTHERBOARD Model
Your RAM information (clock speed, channels, kind ect)
How many other components are attached ect
i7 are cheap here you get it for around 270€
well i saw one i7 (socket LGA2011) for about 900€, cheap? nope
locked