i7 Sandy Bridge 2600 non-k overclocking option
i7 Sandy Bridge 2600 non-k overclocking option
Beating a stale topic again, it seems I’m lagging behind since all the guides I found for i7 non-k overclocking keep returning 404 errors. My BIOS also looks different from any reference images I’ve seen, with new terms used. I’ve seen some non-k boards running at 4.2; if this isn’t safe, I’ll lower it. I own a Corsair water cooler that passed the Prime 95 tests well under TJ Max. Any advice on specific adjustments and values would be greatly appreciated as I’m becoming increasingly frustrated. Thank you!
Peter
You can adjust the Ratio Limit on the cores for Turbo, setting them all to 38 for a full-time 3.8Ghz overclock. It seems you might not be able to reach 4.2Ghz, but some boards could allow the 4 bins to exceed 38, which would bring the speed to 4.2Ghz by using multipliers of 42.
Consider testing it and observe the results. I was considering a full-time 3.8Ghz overclock, but a 4.2Ghz might be achievable. I've been aware you could do this for years, yet I haven't actually overclocked a non-K chip before.
Cannot interact with the non-turbo ratio. The maximum turbo ratios are 39, which I set to 38. Could I simply adjust Clock to 120? That would be the turbo clock. Wouldn't this change the original multiplier from 34 to 4080? Or is this a problematic approach?
Thank you again, sir.
Peter
No, please keep the BCLK unchanged. Anything above 104 could cause system damage. In a Sandy Bridge setup, the BCLK should stay at 100 and remain there. If your Turbo ratios reach 39, proceed. A 500Mhz overclock from a locked chip is perfectly acceptable.
Isn't this specifically related to the turbo boost then? The one-second gap? I'm not trying to be brief, but I'm really curious if that's what it refers to. Thanks again.
When Turbo is turned on (the default setting), your CPU doesn’t actually operate at its original 3.4Ghz speed. With all four cores engaged, it runs at 3.5Ghz, three cores at 3.6Ghz, two at 3.7Ghz, and one at 3.8Ghz. Setting all four cores to 38 or 39 causes the CPU to constantly run at its maximum Turbo speed, effectively acting as a free overclock. This allows the chip to reach up to 3.9Ghz continuously with stock Turbo across all four cores. With stock cooling and voltage, you can achieve around 500Mhz above the base speed. A well-tuned setup can push it to 4 bins or 400Mhz over stock, turning the stock Turbo setting into a solid performance boost. You can also experiment with different ratios—like 39 for 3.9Ghz, 40 for 3.6Ghz, etc.—to see what works best on your board.