- Joined
- May 8, 2016
- Messages
- 1,911 (0.61/day)
System Name | BOX |
---|---|
Processor | Core i7 6950X @ 4,26GHz (1,28V) |
Motherboard | X99 SOC Champion (BIOS F23c + bifurcation mod) |
Cooling | Thermalright Venomous-X + 2x Delta 38mm PWM (Push-Pull) |
Memory | Patriot Viper Steel 4000MHz CL16 4x8GB (@3240MHz CL12.12.12.24 CR2T @ 1,48V) |
Video Card(s) | Titan V (~1650MHz @ 0.77V, HBM2 1GHz, Forced P2 state [OFF]) |
Storage | WD SN850X 2TB + Samsung EVO 2TB (SATA) + Seagate Exos X20 20TB (4Kn mode) |
Display(s) | LG 27GP950-B |
Case | Fractal Design Meshify 2 XL |
Audio Device(s) | Motu M4 (audio interface) + ATH-A900Z + Behringer C-1 |
Power Supply | Seasonic X-760 (760W) |
Mouse | Logitech RX-250 |
Keyboard | HP KB-9970 |
Software | Windows 10 Pro x64 |
@Dron254 You can't. "NvmExpressDxe_4.ffs" file is for UEFI only, and your board doesn't have EFI mode.
For BIOS you would need a NVME OpRom with ".bin" format (and proper device ID for your drive, so that board can recognise it).
@R-T-B @Ranmamez Some X58 boards enable use of max single/dual turbo multipliers as CPU's locked multipler (ie. in case of X5650, you could set "x20" or "x22" or "x23" on them).
It's basicly what was made into a BIOS option [MCE/Multi Core Enhancement] on Coffee/Kaby Lake CPUs few years ago (and which sparked ALL the fuss about "what is the actual stock clocks" for Intel).
For BIOS you would need a NVME OpRom with ".bin" format (and proper device ID for your drive, so that board can recognise it).
@R-T-B @Ranmamez Some X58 boards enable use of max single/dual turbo multipliers as CPU's locked multipler (ie. in case of X5650, you could set "x20" or "x22" or "x23" on them).
It's basicly what was made into a BIOS option [MCE/Multi Core Enhancement] on Coffee/Kaby Lake CPUs few years ago (and which sparked ALL the fuss about "what is the actual stock clocks" for Intel).