The real question is, Is it worth the tiny gain? My answer is NO, and here's why.
If you follow the manufacturer's specifications, your CPU will enjoy the longest possible life.
If you do increase your CPU rate by 20%, this still does not make your RAM faster through the FSB. It still does not make your hard drive faster through the IDE bus. So in general, you would barely see an improvement with most applications.
If you could keep the temperature the same, then overclocking risks are minimal. If you notice that it locks up more, then BACK OFF.
2006-08-20 09:50:04
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answer #1
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answered by Anonymous
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You have no idea what your are even talking about op. Overclocking the GPU is not supposed make apps faster LOL! Overclocking the GPU increases frames per second in games, And it does this by increasing the pixel and texel rate on your GPU. So that being said it can be worth overclocking if you are getting under 30FPS on a game, And the overclock helps to push your FPS to 30 and over. But other than most of the time it really is not worth overclocking your GPU. Really the only way to get better performance is to buy a higher performing GPU than the one you have. Overclocking really does nothing but cause problems with your GPU after about a year or so and sometimes even quicker than that. Especially with AMD GPU's, The extra heat from overclocking can eventually lead to bad artifacts that will be permanent, Because AMD's drivers can barley control the memory module as it is on new healthy card. The same thing can happen to Nvidia GPU's too, But it just takes longer. However some gamers will only keep a GPU for a year, And sometimes keep a GPU less than a year, So they may never run into this problem overclocking.
2014-09-30 02:20:55
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answer #2
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answered by Ted 2
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You cant overclock a dedicated pictures card through motherboard bios,it must be carried out through CCC or software like MSI afterburner,rivatuner and so on You discuss shoppers of crossfire having subject matters operating video games with 2 6950's it really is properly an issue with crossfire and drivers no longer being optimized,those self same human beings can turn crossfire off and get more desirable helpful fps specifically video games with a unmarried card. Overclocking can make a distinction even with the undeniable fact that it does positioned rigidity on the cardboard above what's determined as secure through the producer. I easily have a pal who's at the moment taking section in BF3 Beta with a 6850 and utilising pre launch eleven.10 drivers optimized for BF3 and is averaging 68fps at default video settings (which i imagine is medium) you ought to easilly be getting fps of between 40 and 60 at extreme utilising a a lot more desirable helpful HD6950 at default speeds without overclocking.
2016-11-26 20:13:42
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answer #3
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answered by speelman 4
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CPU, I would thing. Sometimes it is. It depends on what you're using and if you know what you're doing. If you don't know what you're doing, or don't have a program for overclocking to help, then it's best to leave well enough alone. The motherboard I bought has a program that came with it to find a good balance for it, and has an auto overclock setting, so it reads what hardware you have and overclocks appropriately. It may not have the same speed and power as a manual overclock, but I can overclock safely. In this case, I think it's well worth it.
2006-08-20 09:48:56
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answer #4
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answered by criticalcatalyst 4
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Only if you want to boost your artificial benchmark scores or you are having a speed only problem with certain games. It also depends on the GPU core. If you are using something in the Radeon 9xxx to X700 series, it is not worth overclocking. Overclocking is limited with the X800 series. Also, the X1300 series is not worth overclocking. Anything in the X1600 to X1800 series is prime for overclocking. On the nVidia side, anything in the Geforce 6600 series overclocks like a champ but you'll have to keep an eye on core temperature to make sure you do not exceed the safe limit.
2006-08-20 09:49:26
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answer #5
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answered by conradj213 7
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well it depends on how sensitive the gpu is to overclocking some can be overclocked safely some can do serious damage.Overclocking can be good for a small amount but I its not a very good idea.When I once tried it the GPU gets so hot the temperature rises to a very bad level becuase all that heat generated games slow down you may get graphic corruption.Overclocking can cause damage and could also cause a waste of your money.
2006-08-20 09:47:35
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answer #6
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answered by Mike 3
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Not normally. A new mainboard and processor is less than 100 bucks, start from there if you want a faster computer
2006-08-20 10:42:49
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answer #7
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answered by Anonymous
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I don't think so.
Is it really neccessary anyway?
Today's computers are plenty fast to run games.
2006-08-20 09:46:38
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answer #8
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answered by billm_07456 4
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With a good cooling system it shouldn't be a problem.
2006-08-20 09:46:21
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answer #9
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answered by Anonymous
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It speeds up slightly but if your not rich dont try it....If your liquid cooled go for it!!!
2006-08-20 18:17:32
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answer #10
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answered by Rob 2
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