Thanks Nick
I am not normally an overclocker (never new how) but will give these settings a shot this week.
Whats nice about the A8N32 is the settings I posted will not be a major overclock but WILL give your system a really nice boost.
You may need to tinker with the Vcore and Vdd a tad. The lower the VCORE and Vdd and still remain stable the better. What I posted should give your system as much as a 25% increase in performance over the default BIOS settings and still stay well within the limits of not coming anywhere near cooking anything, even under full load for hours.
Another major boost would be to get memory specifically designed and rated for 1T @ 250FSB (expensive), which means you would be able to boost the FSB to 280-300, drop the CPU multipler so it equals about 2750 or so and drop the KB to NB frequency multiplier to x3 and see a true 240-250FSB on your memory.
Your quad-sli setup will love it because it removes the bottleneck the defaut settings produce.
Card placement and shutting down un-needed devices in the BIOS is more important for quad than standard SLI or single cards. The manual shows the sharing taking place and you can see the advantage to a good layout and settings stradegy has for maximum bus time.
Here's the Math:
FSB x CPU Multipler = CPU SPEED
FSB x K8 to NB Frequency times 2 = HTT (2000)
(must stay @ or under 2000, closer the better, over just a tad is OK on A8N32)
Memory Divider: 166 = 5:3 (example = FSB divided by 3 times 5 divided by 2 = Memory speed)
So 250 FSB /3 x 5 = DDR416.66 /2 = 208MHz (respecfully)
That should give you the information you need to tune it.
Raising VCORE is a matter of monitoring temps... I like to keep mine under a load @ or below 50 but 52 is OK. I typically run 47 SOLID unless the ambient room temp is a bit warm. I run 1.7 VCORE with this HSF
http://www.newegg.com/Product/Product.a ... 6835118004
Last edited by NicksFXHouse on Sun Aug 27, 2006 2:27 pm, edited 1 time in total.