I set my timings as follows:
[CODE]DRAM CAS Latency: 3
DRAM Bank Interleave: 4-way
Precharge to Active: 3
Active to Precharge: 9
Active to CMD: 3
REF to ACT/REF to REF: 21
ACT (0) to ACT (1): 2
Read to Precharge: 3
Write to Read CMD: 4
Write Recovery Time[/CODE]
I wanted to set my DRAM Frequency to 200MHZ how it should be, but what's weird is that when I run tests with Everest using the DRAM Frequency: 200MHZ setting it shows me that I'm running at
[CODE]Memory Bus 120.0 MHz
DRAM:FSB Ratio 3:5[/CODE]
When I go back into the BIOS and set DRAM Frequency to 333MHZ I get what it should be...
[CODE]Memory Bus 200.0 MHz
DRAM:FSB Ratio 1:1[/CODE]
Here is the whole Everest test
[CODE]Field Value
CPU Properties
CPU Type DualCore Intel Pentium D 930
CPU Alias Presler
CPU Stepping C1
Engineering Sample No
CPUID CPU Name Intel(R) Pentium(R) D CPU 3.00GHz
CPUID Revision 00000F64h
CPU Speed
CPU Clock 2999.8 MHz (original: 3000 MHz)
CPU Multiplier 15.0x
CPU FSB 200.0 MHz (original: 200 MHz)
Memory Bus 200.0 MHz
DRAM:FSB Ratio 1:1
CPU Cache
L1 Trace Cache 12K Instructions per core
L1 Data Cache 16 KB per core
L2 Cache 2 MB per core (On-Die, ECC, ATC, Full-Speed)
Motherboard Properties
Motherboard ID 63-0100-001131-00101111-011507-P4M800+$P23G_RELEASE 01/15/2007
Motherboard Name PCChips P23G (3 PCI, 1 AGP, 1 CNR, 2 DDR DIMM, 2 DDR2 DIMM, Audio, Video, LAN)
Chipset Properties
Motherboard Chipset VIA P4M800 Pro
Memory Timings 3-3-3-9 (CL-RCD-RP-RAS)
Command Rate (CR) 2T
SPD Memory Modules
DIMM2: Kingston 1 GB DDR2-533 DDR2 SDRAM (5-4-4-12 @ 266 MHz) (4-4-4-12 @ 266 MHz) (3-3-3-9 @ 200 MHz)
BIOS Properties
System BIOS Date 01/15/07
Video BIOS Date 11/25/06
DMI BIOS Version 080012
Graphics Processor Properties
Video Adapter ATI Radeon X1650 Pro (RV530)
GPU Code Name RV530 (AGP 8x 1002 / 71C6, Rev 00)
GPU Clock 594 MHz (original: 600 MHz)
Memory Clock 396 MHz (original: 400 MHz)
[/CODE]
My main concern here is over-clocking. I REALLY don't want to over-clock because I hardly ever turn off my computer and I would like to keep all my hardware running well for a while to come. Is there ANY way for me to REALLY test to see what I'm running at? I mean, do you guys think I'm safe anyway?
2007-04-18
13:29:33
·
1 answers
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asked by
Anonymous
in
Computers & Internet
➔ Hardware
➔ Other - Hardware