System specs:
Asus P7P55D-E (Intel P55)
Intel Core i5 760 2.80GHz (Lynnfield)
GSKill (2x4GB) DDR3 RipJaws X PC3-12800 1600MHz (Model Number: F3-12800CL9D-8GBXL)
Noctua NH-D14
When I first got the system I noticed the idle temps with stock cooler were 50-60 degrees, and under load would reach 80-90 which was just ridiculous. So, I decided to get a cooler, and then I figured if I was going to buy a cooler why not buy a good one and try some overclocking. So, I grabbed a Noctua NH-D14 followed TinyTom's overclocking instructions in his review of the i5-760, eg.
1. Set core voltage to 1.25v
2. Enabled load line calibration
3. IMC volts - I left these untouched as my RAM is at stock.
4. Set my RAM to stock settings: Voltage (1.5v), Timings (9-9-9-24-2N) .. I left the many other RAM timing components on auto.
5. IOH core .. my bios does not have a IOH core setting, it does have PCH which I think is the replacement on Intel P55?
6. C1E disabled, SpeedStep disabled
7. BCLK to 200Mhz, Multiplier to 20
I started with a lower multiplier and worked my way up to 20, just to be safe
At 200 x 15 (3Ghz) it was stable in Prime95 for 20 mins and temps didn't exceed 60 degrees
However at 200 x 20 (4Ghz .. my target) in Prime95 for 5-15 mins one core/thread failed with a hardware failure. What I want to know is where/what to tweak to find stability. I am a complete noob at overclocking and I don't just want to mess with everything in the hope of figuring it out, I'd rather understand what/why I am changing things and only increase what needs to be increased to get it stable.
I tried bumping the PCH voltage up 1 then 2 increments, assuming this was like bumping the IOH core, as included in the original instructions .. this made no difference.
So, other options?
1. I plan to reset that to auto and bump the IMC volts up a notch or two, just in case it's a RAM related fault.
2. Another option is to up the RAM voltage directly, but it is running at stock speeds so I assumed this is unnecessary.
3. I did read somewhere that the P7P55D-E may not have high enough quality components to handle a 200 BCLK, so another option is to bring that down to 190 with x21 multiplier or similar.
On a related note, has anyone overclocked GSKill RAM like mine on P55.. how do I go about doing it, and is it safe with only stock heatsinks and any overflow from the NH-D14?
Asus P7P55D-E (Intel P55)
Intel Core i5 760 2.80GHz (Lynnfield)
GSKill (2x4GB) DDR3 RipJaws X PC3-12800 1600MHz (Model Number: F3-12800CL9D-8GBXL)
Noctua NH-D14
When I first got the system I noticed the idle temps with stock cooler were 50-60 degrees, and under load would reach 80-90 which was just ridiculous. So, I decided to get a cooler, and then I figured if I was going to buy a cooler why not buy a good one and try some overclocking. So, I grabbed a Noctua NH-D14 followed TinyTom's overclocking instructions in his review of the i5-760, eg.
1. Set core voltage to 1.25v
2. Enabled load line calibration
3. IMC volts - I left these untouched as my RAM is at stock.
4. Set my RAM to stock settings: Voltage (1.5v), Timings (9-9-9-24-2N) .. I left the many other RAM timing components on auto.
5. IOH core .. my bios does not have a IOH core setting, it does have PCH which I think is the replacement on Intel P55?
6. C1E disabled, SpeedStep disabled
7. BCLK to 200Mhz, Multiplier to 20
I started with a lower multiplier and worked my way up to 20, just to be safe

At 200 x 15 (3Ghz) it was stable in Prime95 for 20 mins and temps didn't exceed 60 degrees

However at 200 x 20 (4Ghz .. my target) in Prime95 for 5-15 mins one core/thread failed with a hardware failure. What I want to know is where/what to tweak to find stability. I am a complete noob at overclocking and I don't just want to mess with everything in the hope of figuring it out, I'd rather understand what/why I am changing things and only increase what needs to be increased to get it stable.
I tried bumping the PCH voltage up 1 then 2 increments, assuming this was like bumping the IOH core, as included in the original instructions .. this made no difference.

So, other options?
1. I plan to reset that to auto and bump the IMC volts up a notch or two, just in case it's a RAM related fault.
2. Another option is to up the RAM voltage directly, but it is running at stock speeds so I assumed this is unnecessary.
3. I did read somewhere that the P7P55D-E may not have high enough quality components to handle a 200 BCLK, so another option is to bring that down to 190 with x21 multiplier or similar.
On a related note, has anyone overclocked GSKill RAM like mine on P55.. how do I go about doing it, and is it safe with only stock heatsinks and any overflow from the NH-D14?