Since I think it's time to push this baby to its air-limits before I get to move to water, can some of you please fill me in if I thought this method up correctly:
Step 1: find BCLK wall
- Lower CPU multiplier to like 10-12 or something, lower RAM and uncore speeds to as low as possible, then crank up the BCLK step by step until it fails Windows boot.
Question on BCLK cranking in low multipliers: will extra voltage help? or do I only need extra volts when I crank back the multi?
Step 2: combine BCLK with full multi
- Multi back at 20, RAM and uncore low as possible, crank the BCLK up until it fails. You can probably start halfway between the original BCLK and the limit from step 1.
Question here: BCLK will most likely be lower then with multi at low, and I will definately need volts here right?
Step 3: tickle the RAMsies
- Basically, get the CPU multi back down, crank RAM clocks step by step again, add volts when getting failures.
Step 4: combine
- tick down all max settings a nice bit, combine, and tweak until the sun rises again.
What I "know":
- Cranking QPI voltage up to 1.3 can improve stability according to some sources
- CPU voltage should not be set higher than 1.25 unless I've got a good health insurance on the 920 (which I don't). Again, this is according to some sources, I haven't confirmed this.
- RAM voltage should not exceed 1.65 concerning the in-proc memory controller (I don't feel like killing stuff, I just want to clock it up a fair notch)
- Uncore volts shouldn't exceed 1.45 according to some sources
Other stuff I want to know:
- If I shouldn't set CPU voltage above 1.25, why does it show 1.360 on auto settings in CPU-Z? Am I getting into the danger zone or is Auto/CPU-Z messing with me?
- Is there anyone who actually set QPI/Uncore volts and noticed improvement in stability?
- And of course, did I miss something very important in my steps other than "Watch temps!"?
I really wonder if I can kick 4Ghz on air, I did it before but it was unstable as hell (see CPU-Z in sig)