F5F Stay Refreshed Power Users Overclocking E5400 + GIGABYTE GA-G41M-ES2L

E5400 + GIGABYTE GA-G41M-ES2L

E5400 + GIGABYTE GA-G41M-ES2L

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zLeoZiin
Senior Member
503
05-30-2016, 07:08 PM
#1
I'm facing difficulties achieving a consistent stable overclock on this board. After removing the chip from my ASUS P5Q SE/R, I understand its constraints, but I'm not reaching the same performance. The Gigabyte G41 includes built-in graphics which might affect overclocking. I configured PCIE at 100mhz, FSB at 320 mhz, and multiplex to 11x for a target of 3.5ghz. On my other system, I managed an OC of 3.7ghz, indicating this board isn't pushing the chip as much. The Vcore is set at 1.4 volts, with a RAM ratio of 3:5, and everything is properly configured. These are the standard settings. I've experimented with lower OC levels, but even a small increase causes the system to crash before Windows loads.
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zLeoZiin
05-30-2016, 07:08 PM #1

I'm facing difficulties achieving a consistent stable overclock on this board. After removing the chip from my ASUS P5Q SE/R, I understand its constraints, but I'm not reaching the same performance. The Gigabyte G41 includes built-in graphics which might affect overclocking. I configured PCIE at 100mhz, FSB at 320 mhz, and multiplex to 11x for a target of 3.5ghz. On my other system, I managed an OC of 3.7ghz, indicating this board isn't pushing the chip as much. The Vcore is set at 1.4 volts, with a RAM ratio of 3:5, and everything is properly configured. These are the standard settings. I've experimented with lower OC levels, but even a small increase causes the system to crash before Windows loads.

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Voltys
Junior Member
5
05-30-2016, 08:41 PM
#2
it's a really bad board, even the G31 was better for overclocking
i'm pretty sure this board has 4x PCIe too
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Voltys
05-30-2016, 08:41 PM #2

it's a really bad board, even the G31 was better for overclocking
i'm pretty sure this board has 4x PCIe too

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JonaxWTF
Member
221
06-19-2016, 02:54 PM
#3
300 is typically the edge of that board.
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JonaxWTF
06-19-2016, 02:54 PM #3

300 is typically the edge of that board.

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153
06-19-2016, 06:51 PM
#4
Does the use of onboard graphics affect the process of unclocking?
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RinkAudenaerde
06-19-2016, 06:51 PM #4

Does the use of onboard graphics affect the process of unclocking?

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Marcustheduke
Senior Member
679
06-22-2016, 06:05 AM
#5
The FSB speed on the board is specified, and different chips have different frequencies. Since the board supports a higher frequency than the Q9550, it can accommodate that chip.
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Marcustheduke
06-22-2016, 06:05 AM #5

The FSB speed on the board is specified, and different chips have different frequencies. Since the board supports a higher frequency than the Q9550, it can accommodate that chip.

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OverlordCoby
Member
169
06-22-2016, 01:14 PM
#6
the wall on that board is usually 300, but that's not accurate. As tekknyne mentions, the G41 works well with faster 45 nm chips. It's true that with these chips, the board isn't very good at overclocking. I own two G'byte G41s that can handle speeds above 360 MHz. The graphics on the board don't affect the overclocking process. Your RAM ratio suggests you're overclocking your memory. In BIOS, turn off Auto Memory Settings and set the system memory multiplier to 2.0. Then your memory clock should show double the FSB frequency. With a 200 MHz FSB, that means your memory clock should be 400 MHz. Keep in mind, because of the high internal multiplier, you don't have to push the FSB much beyond 300 MHz for noticeable overclocking.
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OverlordCoby
06-22-2016, 01:14 PM #6

the wall on that board is usually 300, but that's not accurate. As tekknyne mentions, the G41 works well with faster 45 nm chips. It's true that with these chips, the board isn't very good at overclocking. I own two G'byte G41s that can handle speeds above 360 MHz. The graphics on the board don't affect the overclocking process. Your RAM ratio suggests you're overclocking your memory. In BIOS, turn off Auto Memory Settings and set the system memory multiplier to 2.0. Then your memory clock should show double the FSB frequency. With a 200 MHz FSB, that means your memory clock should be 400 MHz. Keep in mind, because of the high internal multiplier, you don't have to push the FSB much beyond 300 MHz for noticeable overclocking.

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Ernst_sel
Member
246
06-29-2016, 08:19 AM
#7
I see what you did there. I’m familiar with tweaking this chip on my Asus board, and adjusting the FSB to memory ratio is simpler there. On this gigabyte board, the DDR ratio numbers are 2.66 or 3.00, and each change affects the DRAM frequency.
It’s true that even on my Asus board I’d tweak FSB and DDR settings before using CPUZ to confirm the actual DRAM speed.
Thanks for confirming the graphics should not be a problem. I assumed it was my mistake, but I’ll review the DDR settings and start with basic timings.
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Ernst_sel
06-29-2016, 08:19 AM #7

I see what you did there. I’m familiar with tweaking this chip on my Asus board, and adjusting the FSB to memory ratio is simpler there. On this gigabyte board, the DDR ratio numbers are 2.66 or 3.00, and each change affects the DRAM frequency.
It’s true that even on my Asus board I’d tweak FSB and DDR settings before using CPUZ to confirm the actual DRAM speed.
Thanks for confirming the graphics should not be a problem. I assumed it was my mistake, but I’ll review the DDR settings and start with basic timings.

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ochan123
Junior Member
19
07-01-2016, 04:12 AM
#8
I realized I need to adjust my initial post. The 3:5 ratio applies to my Asus board and the two 2gig OCZ Fatality ddr2 1066 mhz drives, while the Gigabyte board uses a different setup with one 2 gig ddr2 800.
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ochan123
07-01-2016, 04:12 AM #8

I realized I need to adjust my initial post. The 3:5 ratio applies to my Asus board and the two 2gig OCZ Fatality ddr2 1066 mhz drives, while the Gigabyte board uses a different setup with one 2 gig ddr2 800.

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MiLk_My_CoW69
Member
62
07-01-2016, 12:22 PM
#9
Nonsense. As tekknyne mentions, the G41 works well with faster 45 nm chips. It’s true that using them limits the board’s overclocking potential.
I own two G'byte G41s that can exceed 360 MHz.
Graphics cards don’t influence the overclocking process.
The RAM ratio suggests you’re pushing your RAM too much. Adjust your BIOS settings by turning off Auto and setting the system memory multiplier to 2.0. This should align your memory clock with twice the FSB frequency.
With a 200 MHz FSB, this would mean a 400 MHz memory clock.
Keep in mind, a high internal multiplier means you don’t need to significantly increase the FSB for noticeable gains.
PCI 4x won’t change the overclocking much, but a 4x slot slot won’t be very helpful either.
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MiLk_My_CoW69
07-01-2016, 12:22 PM #9

Nonsense. As tekknyne mentions, the G41 works well with faster 45 nm chips. It’s true that using them limits the board’s overclocking potential.
I own two G'byte G41s that can exceed 360 MHz.
Graphics cards don’t influence the overclocking process.
The RAM ratio suggests you’re pushing your RAM too much. Adjust your BIOS settings by turning off Auto and setting the system memory multiplier to 2.0. This should align your memory clock with twice the FSB frequency.
With a 200 MHz FSB, this would mean a 400 MHz memory clock.
Keep in mind, a high internal multiplier means you don’t need to significantly increase the FSB for noticeable gains.
PCI 4x won’t change the overclocking much, but a 4x slot slot won’t be very helpful either.

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Schocko1
Junior Member
46
07-01-2016, 07:35 PM
#10
i have an MSI g31m3-L motherboard and I'm unable to push the e5400 beyond 240 fsb. my vcore is set at 1.3 and I can't adjust it through bios, while the fsb:ram ratio stands at 3:5. the motherboard doesn't seem to overclock much, except possibly due to unstable ram.
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Schocko1
07-01-2016, 07:35 PM #10

i have an MSI g31m3-L motherboard and I'm unable to push the e5400 beyond 240 fsb. my vcore is set at 1.3 and I can't adjust it through bios, while the fsb:ram ratio stands at 3:5. the motherboard doesn't seem to overclock much, except possibly due to unstable ram.

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