Undervolting Experiences with Athlon64 X2
Moderators: NeilBlanchard, Ralf Hutter, sthayashi, Lawrence Lee
-
- Posts: 53
- Joined: Tue Jan 18, 2005 4:51 pm
Undervolting Experiences with Athlon64 X2
Hi there guys,
I have an almost totally silent system with an undervolted Athlon64 X2 3800+ processor. However, my Asus A8N-SLI Premium motherboard has a bug in the BIOS which prevents you from using a vcore of lower than 1.1volts. I've contacted Asus about it, and I hope they release a new BIOS soon to fix this. However, I'd like to know how low other members have been able to drop the voltage while leaving the processor at it's stock speed? Mine works perfectly at 2Ghz at 1.1volts, and I suspect it could go lower if I had a working BIOS!
Many thanks,
Michael.
I have an almost totally silent system with an undervolted Athlon64 X2 3800+ processor. However, my Asus A8N-SLI Premium motherboard has a bug in the BIOS which prevents you from using a vcore of lower than 1.1volts. I've contacted Asus about it, and I hope they release a new BIOS soon to fix this. However, I'd like to know how low other members have been able to drop the voltage while leaving the processor at it's stock speed? Mine works perfectly at 2Ghz at 1.1volts, and I suspect it could go lower if I had a working BIOS!
Many thanks,
Michael.
I just set up an X2 4400+ on a DFI nF4 UT Ultra-D board. The processor stock VID is just 1.30V, and it also will only accept settings down to 1.10V.
I think the 1.10V is a constraint that the processor imposes (just like the FID locks on non-FX CPUs). At the very least, it is not just ASUS.
I am not sure why AMD would be doing this, except possibly to create more market share for mobile processors that have lower VIDs enabled.
I think the 1.10V is a constraint that the processor imposes (just like the FID locks on non-FX CPUs). At the very least, it is not just ASUS.
I am not sure why AMD would be doing this, except possibly to create more market share for mobile processors that have lower VIDs enabled.
-
- Posts: 53
- Joined: Tue Jan 18, 2005 4:51 pm
Well that plain stinks I was looking forward to getting my 3800+ even lower. Trouble is, there is no X2 mobile alternative, so why are AMD imposing these limits? The reason I thought it a BIOS problem is that I also can't overvolt any higher than 1.35volts, and I've read of plenty of people going higher than this, even with the same motherboard and BIOS I have and an X2 processor.
-
- Posts: 5
- Joined: Sun Sep 04, 2005 3:02 pm
Same problem with my setup: an X2 4400+ (E6-stepping) with an Asus A8N-E. At 2.2GHz it goes down to 1.15V (but I'm working with 1.20V, just to be save) At 2.0 Ghz I’m also able to work at 1.12V. My board always adds 0.02V. No voltage lower than 1.12 possible...
I hope this is fixable with a new bios, because I think these new X2 have an extraordinary undervolting capability. I’ve never heard of any “voltage-lock“ that AMD could build into the processor.
If the limit is in the processor then older core’s (e.g. CG-Stepping) should have a lower possible “lowest voltage”. If it’s just a safety feature in the bios, the different steppings should behave identical. (unless there is a specific lowest voltage for every stepping in the bios…)
So…
Who has an “old” CG- or a D-core in an NForce4 board that has a lower “lowest voltage” than 1.1V?
Who has an E-stepping core in a non-NForce4 board that has a lower “lowest voltage” than 1.1V?
I hope this is fixable with a new bios, because I think these new X2 have an extraordinary undervolting capability. I’ve never heard of any “voltage-lock“ that AMD could build into the processor.
If the limit is in the processor then older core’s (e.g. CG-Stepping) should have a lower possible “lowest voltage”. If it’s just a safety feature in the bios, the different steppings should behave identical. (unless there is a specific lowest voltage for every stepping in the bios…)
So…
Who has an “old” CG- or a D-core in an NForce4 board that has a lower “lowest voltage” than 1.1V?
Who has an E-stepping core in a non-NForce4 board that has a lower “lowest voltage” than 1.1V?
-
- Posts: 53
- Joined: Tue Jan 18, 2005 4:51 pm
Anybody tried undervolting with ASRock 939Dual-Sata2 motherboard?
According to the specifications the voltage range is 0.80 - 1.55 V but the maximum voltage is automatically adjusted to 0.05 V above default voltage and I don't know if it does something similar with minimum voltage. I am thinking of maybe buying this motherboard and AMD X2 3800+.
Here's a review of this motherboard:
http://www.anandtech.com/mb/showdoc.aspx?i=2524&p=1
According to the specifications the voltage range is 0.80 - 1.55 V but the maximum voltage is automatically adjusted to 0.05 V above default voltage and I don't know if it does something similar with minimum voltage. I am thinking of maybe buying this motherboard and AMD X2 3800+.
Here's a review of this motherboard:
http://www.anandtech.com/mb/showdoc.aspx?i=2524&p=1
Slightly different regime, but another datapoint.. I'm very mildly overclocking my X2 4800+ from 2400 to 2520Mhz. It does this at stock 1.30 voltage. However, this voltage seems necessary for this speed, 1.275 volts will almost work, but dual Prime95 testing failed after 5-8 hours. 1.30 volts successfully ran 30 hours before I stopped.
I have not run underclocked voltage tests, those would be interesting. I am only overclocking since my machine is silent anyway. (The Scythe Ninja + Antec P180 + Seasonic + 7800GT combo is unbeatable! Only drive seek noise remains..)
I have not run underclocked voltage tests, those would be interesting. I am only overclocking since my machine is silent anyway. (The Scythe Ninja + Antec P180 + Seasonic + 7800GT combo is unbeatable! Only drive seek noise remains..)
-
- Posts: 53
- Joined: Tue Jan 18, 2005 4:51 pm
-
- Posts: 278
- Joined: Thu Mar 27, 2003 5:30 am
based on this reviewdan wrote:what is the estimated power consumption of an x2 @ 2ghz and @ vcore 1.1v?
http://www.xbitlabs.com/articles/cpu/di ... 800_3.html
load ~65W idle 5.8W.
I doubt that low,