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I need to enable overclocking on my HP desktop!
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Thread : I need to enable overclocking on my HP desktop!
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Profile: newbie
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HP informed me that motherboards that come with HP desktops have something that disables any form of CPU overclocking. GPU overclocking works fine. So they told me that if I want to overclock my CPU at all, I would have to buy a new motherboard. I figured I could just overclock it a little to get a taste of overclocking before shelling out the bucks for a brand new heatsink. So how do I escape HP's hell of anti-overclocking? EDIT: I heard before that you need at least DDR2 800 MHz ram to overclock. Is this true, or is my configuration (two 667 MHz 1 GB modules and one 800 MHz 1 GB module) fine? Message edited by coolgamer512 on 06-28-2008 at 08:59:36 AM --------------- http://www.ugconline.co.nr |
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Profile: enthusiast
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you dont.
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Profile: addict
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with ddr2 prices being as low as they are, i'd honestly just get 2 gigs of overclocking ddr2, a better cooler, and an matx board that allows for overclocking, then just pop that stuff into your hp case if you're that obsessed about it.
--------------- Q6600 @ 3.6GHz|2GB Crucial Ballistix Tracer|DFI P965-S Dark|8800GT 512MB|Raptor Main Drive|Audigy X-Fi (Modded)|Rocketfish Case with H2O| AMD Athlon X2 4800+ @ 2.7GHz|OCZ Golden Gamer @ 450MHz 2.5-3-2-5, 1T|250GB Main Drive|2900XT|NZXT Zero w/ h2o |
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Profile: member
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If the mobo doesn't let you OC, you can't do anything about it. The reason you can OC your video card because it's software related while CPU OC is hardware related... at least i'm pretty sure of it, anyone can confirm I am right or wrong? Message edited by BigBurn on 06-28-2008 at 09:21:40 AM |
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Some call me ... Tim?
Profile: enthusiast
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A permanent GPU overclock will simply reset the bios on the graphics board.
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Profile: nimble knuckle
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TBH, most brand name computers like Dell, HP, Lenovo, etc lock their bios and don't have overclocking features. Even the ones that do have overclocking enabled, there are a few features disabled. |
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Profile: newbie
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--------------- http://www.ugconline.co.nr |
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Profile: Forum Veteran
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It's unlikely any bios made for HP's proprietary motherboard would allow oc. Not to mention not every motherboard chipset is physically able to overclock. Big companies tend to use the cheapest hardware for parts that they don't think typical people will notice, like motherboard. If it's something like g965, it just won't oc. You can't make a lawn mower run at 100mph. It's not going to happen. Message edited by dagger on 06-28-2008 at 09:29:51 PM --------------- Q6600@3.6ghz, GA-EX38-DS4 X38 chipset motherboard, 8gb 800mhz ddr2 4-3-3-12, 8800GTS(g92)@780mhz, 1TB 7200rpm 32mb cache hdd, 850watt 12v rails=4x20amp powersupply |
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Profile: Faithful Poster
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Me thinks the OP will pay closer attention to the system he buys next time if overclocking is in his future. |
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Profile: newbie
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--------------- http://www.ugconline.co.nr |
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Profile: nimble knuckle
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If it is a newer Intel CPU, you could try pinmodding it to trick it into running a higher FSB. Check this link or try googling it for more information. Edit:
Message quoted 1 times
Message edited by outlw6669 on 06-28-2008 at 11:03:27 PM --------------- If the automobile had followed the same development cycle as the computer, a Rolls-Royce today would cost $100, get a million miles to the gallon, and explode once a year, killing everyone inside. PSA |
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Profile: nimble knuckle
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--------------- If the automobile had followed the same development cycle as the computer, a Rolls-Royce today would cost $100, get a million miles to the gallon, and explode once a year, killing everyone inside. PSA |
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Profile: Forum Veteran
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Hardcore site, btw... --------------- Q6600@3.6ghz, GA-EX38-DS4 X38 chipset motherboard, 8gb 800mhz ddr2 4-3-3-12, 8800GTS(g92)@780mhz, 1TB 7200rpm 32mb cache hdd, 850watt 12v rails=4x20amp powersupply |
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Profile: newbie
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