View Full Version : Registry Error
abit bh6
300 a cele
ive tried to oc my first celeron...
and its my first time oc ing everr....
it booted up normally... and fine...
on win ME...
then i remembered that i should use mbm 5
and shutdown now..
i install those apps...
and then... i thought i should put..
mbm to start when win.. starts...
i reboot.. and it says.. i got a reg. error.
let win. fix it and reboot..
it reboots by itself..
and then i get teh blue screen error...
after rebooting... 10 times..
i finnal got through..
i have yet to reboot..
is this a prob with oc ing? although i changed
the bios back to default?
or because i told mbm to start when windows start
thank you for bearing through this long post..
and thank you for your replies..
P.S. if i up the fsb but not the core voltage
will the cpu burn up?/over heat
Newbie_Doo
02-24-01, 10:33 PM
If you are using the stock heatsink/fan that came with the chip-STOP. Make sure that you have thermal compound between the heatsink and chip and not the frag tape that comes with it. You will get BSOD's for lots of things, but a lot of the time, they are related to insufficient voltage or excessive heat. Sometimes both. Make sure that your heatsink and cpu are in good contact with each other, and take small steps increasing the speed until it becomes unstable. Then increase the voltage in small steps until it becomes stable again, then increase the speed again, then the voltage. Take small steps and go slow. If you haven't read the guides on the main page, please do so. There is a wealth of information there and some of it refers to the very equipment that you have.
Good luck.
I got a registry error when I pushed my chip too far whilst keeping the core voltage at 1.8v. I did this once and had registry errors. I thought I was screwed but I somehow found a backup copy in my Windows directory and recovered my system without having to reinstall Windows. Backup everything important is my advice !!
I'll try to answer your last PS question. Increasing the fsb does increase heat a little and increasing the CPU core voltage increases heat a fair amount. If you increased the fsb a step or two and run it at default voltage, it's unlikely to "burn up" the CPU. At most, it'll be unstable and maybe give you registry errors or will crash or not boot up.. That's when you need to goose the voltage for stability. NOW, you need better cooling because overclocking and more voltage really starts cranking up the heat on your CPU. The higher the voltage increase and the more extreme you overclock, then the more heat related problems you have to deal with.
I'll try to answer your last PS question. Increasing the fsb does increase heat a little and increasing the CPU core voltage increases heat a fair amount. If you increased the fsb a step or two and run it at default voltage, it's unlikely to "burn up" the CPU. At most, it'll be unstable and maybe give you registry errors or will crash or not boot up.. That's when you need to goose the voltage for stability. NOW, you need better cooling because overclocking and more voltage really starts cranking up the heat on your CPU. The higher the voltage increase and the more extreme you overclock, then the more heat related problems you have to deal with.
hmmmm...thanks a lot guys...
but how come.. i upped the fsb to i think
73, on a bh6 300a cele
it booted fine.. but when i restarted.. it didnt boot windows at all?
-even reseting all the bios.. and back to default speed
it doesnt run normally,... luckily my win Me
had the sys restore.. and now im talking to you guys
P.S. it didnt detect my hd during boot for a while...
for me registry errors are usually ram. i dont know what type of ram you have but what works for me is to lower the i/o voltage. my p2 350@532 will have registry error at 3.5v i/o but will post and run benchmarks all day at 3.2v
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