September 15, 200817 yr Moderator >vgbaron, If I wanted to bring it up to, lets say 3.0>instead of 3.375, what entry would I make in the BIOS? I'm>thinking that I may start out a little lower then build into a>higher setting. Your thoughts?Always move at the speed that YOU are comfortable with - go with 3 for a while and see what develops. If all OK, and it should be, kick it up a notch.Simplest way to calculate - your multiplier in the q6600 is 9 so 3.0/9= 333 - that's your setting. I have mine set at 405 so 405x9=3645For what you want, do not mess around with changing the multiplier.Have fun,VicQ6600 G0 CPU 2.4 o/c 3.65Evga 680i A1 with P31 BIOS 2G XP2-8500 DDR2 1066FSB Mushkin 996535 RAM 5-5-4-12-2T320G 7200 HD partitioned for XP/Vista/Programs 2 - 74G Raptors in RAID0 500G 7200 HD for backup SATA DVD burner Evga 8800GTS 640 PCIx XG 174.74 702/1620/792Kandalf LCS case w/ built in liquid cooling 850W Thermaltake power supplyVisit the Virtual Pilot's Centerwww.flightadventures.comhttp://www.hifisim.com/banners/hifi-supporter-sigbanner.jpg RIG#1 - I9 14900K MSI Pro z790 RTX 5070Ti 40" 4K Monitor 3840x2160
September 15, 200817 yr Droop is good. Droop on. The idea is that voltage will not remain precisely stable during an unload event. It will increase, then return to its regulated level. That overshoot on the high side might momentarily exceed a Vmax level. The voltage reduction that occurs under load (Vdroop) will allow this voltage recovery event without overshooting Vmax. Droop is a design parameter, not a sign of a weak mobo.
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