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Free Open Book
PC Hacks 100 Industrial-Strength Tips and Tools |
Hack 25 Control CPU Clock Speed from the BIOS
Increase your CPU speed with parameters controlled by your BIOS. After you've determined your present CPU speed [Hack #6] and[Hack #24] Some system boards give you everything you need to adjust clock speed from within the BIOS setup. Figure 3-21 shows very basic CPU speed control available in the Award BIOS of an ECS system board for an AMD Athlon CPU. Figure 3-21. This Award BIOS setup program provides only CPU clock control with a default of 166 MHz![]() Starting with a system with an AMD Athlon XP that clocks at 1.9 GHz, with the original or default speed setting based on a 166 MHz CPU clock and an internal CPU clock multiplier value of 11.5 (166 11.5 = 1.91 GHz), adjust the base clock speed up incrementally until the system fails to boot up or function reliably. Changing the base CPU clock speed to 185 MHz with the same fixed multiplier value (11.5), the CPU makes it up to 2.13 GHz (11.4% faster), runs reliably with no hacking other than this speed setting, and delivers a measured 11.40% performance increase per Sandra benchmarks [Hack #23] . As shown in Figure 3-22, the CPU clock can be adjusted in 1 MHz increments up to 199 MHz. A setting of 185 MHz with a CPU multiplier of 11.5 causes the CPU to clock at 2.13 GHz. Figure 3-22. CPU clock settings in 1 MHz increments with 185 MHz chosen in the process of overclocking in small steps![]() When adjusting the CPU speed, you must be aware of one other clock value that may increase or decrease as the main CPU/FSB clock is adjusted, that of the PCI bus clock. System boards use various divider and multiplier logic circuits to keep the PCI and memory bus in sync with CPU operations. Like the CPU, ramping up these clock speeds too high (too low never seems to be a problem) can cause the system to function unreliably. The default FSB speeds for popular CPUs are shown in Table 3-4.
You can typically get away with allowing the default 33 MHz PCI bus speed to increase 10-20%, letting it run between 36 and 40 MHz, but this will depend on whether or not your peripheral cards (video, LAN, sound) can handle the higher speed. I also tried overclocking an older Pentium III chip but ran into problems. The first sign of trouble when overclocking appeared in the P.O.S.T. phase. The Memory Test indicated that there were 524288 K of RAM (512 MB) when the system was running with the stable "124/31" overclocked settings. When I used the available 124/41 setting, the CPU still ran at 744 MHz, but the system became unstable once the operating system was loaded and running. Pushing the CPU even further with a selection of 133/33 allowed the system to run at 800MHz, but the memory test stopped testing at 360MB of RAM, as shown in Figure 3-23.
Figure 3-23. Memory test misses some RAM when overclocked![]()
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