Overclocking is indeed dangerous, and unless you take massive risks usually yields only minimal results.
You basically change settings in the hardware to override things like clockspeeds and temperature constraints.
These settings are made in the factory to assure the product works well and doesn't get damaged by overheating or overvoltage.
Manufacturers of course build in safety margins in their products. Overclocking reduces or completely removes those safety margins.
Some hardware suppliers selling ready made CDs unscrupulously buy lower spec hardware and overclock it, then sell it for the price of the faster (more expensive) hardware it now appears to be to the uninformed.
My advise: don't do it...
At best you get a small performance increase for the price of a system that breaks down more quickly and crashes more frequently, reducing the lifespan of your PC.
At worst you break expensive things like the CPU and videocard while trying (and remember that any overclocking will void your warranty!).
jwenting
duckman
8,392 posts since Nov 2004
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Overclocking can yield some nice performance increases, but only do it if you:
1) Need the extra speed badly.
2) Have a cpu/motherboard that overclock nicely, and if it's a dell I can assure you your motherboard is NOT a stable overclocker ;P
oenone
Junior Poster in Training
82 posts since Nov 2004
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well yeah it surely is fun and you get to push your comp to the limits. but hey pls be reminded of the consequences:) well enjoy!
ian_tec234
Junior Poster in Training
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little and good you can overclock your dell but not through the bios like most people do... there is a nifty program out there that lets people who have oem locked boards overclock them through windows. Obviously this doesnt work as well as the others but it basically bumps up your fsb which increases your cpu speed and your ram speed. if it is unstable and windows locks up, simply turn off your computer and turn it back on and it resets itself to factory defaults so you can try again with a lower setting. The program is called cpufsb . You should check it out.
nizzy1115
Practically a Posting Shark
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Sorry nizzy, but with only fsb adjustment on offer I consider that utility to be useless!. To get a decent overclock you need to also be able to adjust RAM settings and voltage levels, if need be. That fsb tool might squeeze a tiny bit extra out with stability, but it wouldn't be worth the effort.
Catweazle
Grandad
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Sorry nizzy, but with only fsb adjustment on offer I consider that utility to be useless!. To get a decent overclock you need to also be able to adjust RAM settings and voltage levels, if need be. That fsb tool might squeeze a tiny bit extra out with stability, but it wouldn't be worth the effort.
Yeah i agree that its not the best, however it does work suprisingly well. Its enough to make a noticable difference in playing games. I have a 2.6 and i run at 3.2 stable no heat problems (ive gone 3.4 but under load i hit 58-60* so i stoped). It makes a great difference in the computers performance when i use photo shop cs and other video editing software. Also I can deffinatly see doom 3 run a lot smoother especially when there are lots of characters on the screen. Additionally, for what ever benchmarking is worth, i have doubled my score on one benchmarking test from stock (i think the cpu test that comes with norton system works suit) and i have gained several hundred in 3dmark03 (i havent run 2005 yet). I guess the extra fsb bandwith helps there also. But though it may not be the best results possible, it is the only option many with oem boards can do and it is enough to give them an edge of performance boost that they may want or need, but heck its better than nothing right?
nizzy1115
Practically a Posting Shark
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Sounds like you must be lucky enough to have a motherboard which, despite having a lack of overclocking features in bios, actaully locks the other system buses to a particular value, and does not proportionally alter the other settings along with FSB.
On some boards, altering a setting like FSB will also alter the speed of the device interface, (AGP and PCI buses) and create instability.
Catweazle
Grandad
4,335 posts since Mar 2004
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omw, please don't add new questions to an existing topic. Start a new topic for new questions.
That said, I'd suggest that if you need to ask that question you shouldn't be trying to overclock. It is a complex activity, which involves risk to your equipment. You need to do a LOT of research and reading before considering undertaking an overclock.
Techniques differ for different processors and motherboard types/formats, and the field cannot be covered by someone posting a 'step by step' in a forum post, trying to cover every scenario.
Catweazle
Grandad
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