regan1985
New Member
- Joined
- Jun 7, 2006
- Messages
- 1,449 (0.22/day)
- Location
- Coventry UNI England
Processor | yorkfield core 2 quad Q8200 3.2ghz 1.26v |
---|---|
Motherboard | asus p5Q SE |
Cooling | akasa ak965 |
Memory | Kingston 1066 2x2gb 1104mhz 2.2v |
Video Card(s) | SAPPHIRE HD 2600 XT DDR3 857/1078 |
Storage | 2X Samsung spinpoint 500GB 7200 4x 1tb samsung eco 5400 |
Display(s) | 2xSamsung P2270 22" Widescreen |
Case | NZXT Hush Quiet Case in Black |
Power Supply | OCZ StealthXStream 500w Silent Power Supply |
Software | windows 7 64 |
just a question i thought tha i be running my computer with ht????am i right in thinking that??my system specs on on my sig!
i read this"
The HT interface 2.0 is specified for optimal signal characteristics when running at 1000 MHz, in other words, the trace layout is optimized for a 1 GHz clock rate. Any frequency below or especially above the nominal value will generate resonance to a certain extent or signal reflexions known as ringing. It is, therefore, highly advisable to keep the HT frequency as close as possible to 1000 MHz. The actual HyperTransport frequency is derived from the external bus input clock and the multiplier. Typical AMD-based motherboards run the external input clock at 200 MHz with a multiplier of 5 x, resulting in a clock rate of 1000 MHz. If the external clock is overclocked, the ratio of the HT bus multiplier needs to be lowered to bring the resulting HT frequency back to 1000 MHz.
on my picture shown here http://forums.techpowerup.com/attachment.php?attachmentid=2861&stc=1&d=1150996139
does it mean i need to keep both the arrow in red at 2000mhz and the arrow in blue at 2000mhz????
i read this"
The HT interface 2.0 is specified for optimal signal characteristics when running at 1000 MHz, in other words, the trace layout is optimized for a 1 GHz clock rate. Any frequency below or especially above the nominal value will generate resonance to a certain extent or signal reflexions known as ringing. It is, therefore, highly advisable to keep the HT frequency as close as possible to 1000 MHz. The actual HyperTransport frequency is derived from the external bus input clock and the multiplier. Typical AMD-based motherboards run the external input clock at 200 MHz with a multiplier of 5 x, resulting in a clock rate of 1000 MHz. If the external clock is overclocked, the ratio of the HT bus multiplier needs to be lowered to bring the resulting HT frequency back to 1000 MHz.
on my picture shown here http://forums.techpowerup.com/attachment.php?attachmentid=2861&stc=1&d=1150996139
does it mean i need to keep both the arrow in red at 2000mhz and the arrow in blue at 2000mhz????