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Solve : A problem with overclocking.? |
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Answer» Dear members . Possibly you have overclocked too much. Maybe your hardware is not suitable. Try increasing CPU core voltage (in BIOS) in small steps. You may damage your computer.i tried that too but the computer keeps restarting . i don't know what to do.Stop overclocking...Overclocking is for people who are knowledgeable and confident and who can afford to replace hardware. If you are not one of these, load "fail safe defaults" in your BIOS. Quote from: patio on February 13, 2010, 12:53:58 PM Stop overclocking...Quote from: Salmon Trout on February 13, 2010, 01:05:06 PM Overclocking is for people who are knowledgeable and confident and who can afford to replace hardware. If you are not one of these, load "fail safe defaults" in your BIOS.i don't care if my hardware is corrupted i will replace it. Quote from: patio on February 13, 2010, 12:53:58 PM Stop overclocking...i will not stop overclockingNice to have infinite money. This isn't GTA you're playing is it?If overclocking produces an unusable system, then what is the point? Mere number-chasing is juvenile. Quote from: kpac on February 14, 2010, 05:05:19 AM Nice to have infinite money. This isn't GTA you're playing is it?no it's reality Personally i'd build a new system for performance gains if money is not an object rather than milking more out of what you have...Quote from: kareem eltanahy on February 13, 2010, 05:45:39 AM i have a little problem with overclocking .when i over clock .the pc keeps restarting, You NEVER posted your hardware specs. What do we have to work with here? At first glance I'm guessing that you increased the Front Side Bus speed.. This would cause both your ram and cpu to operate at higher speeds (this is, if the board uses a traditional FSB and not QPI)... Over clocking the ram could cause the system restart as you described. I installed a PC100 ram module into a motherboard locked at PC 133 speed, forcing the PC 100 module to run at 133 MHZ and caused the system to restart... Your system shutting down is probably due to the cpu over heating, due to inadequate cooling, a factor that must be taken into consideration, DEPENDING on how far you want to go... Assuming you haven't already permanently damaged your hardware by increasing voltages, we may be able to get something going for you here..Post your hardware specs. eg: Model and make of your Motherboard, CPU, RAM, Heatsink/Cooler. Also tell us what frequency you are trying to run your CPU at. No one will be able to help you until you post this information |
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