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Guide to the ASUS P5W DH Deluxe

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Dragonprince

Member
Joined
Dec 4, 2002
Location
CT
Overclocking your machine may damage it, do not contact me and tell me you blew up your rig trying something you read about here. Following any of the steps below is totaly your responsability.:attn:




A lot of new (to the P5W DH) people have been asking me about overclocking on the P5W DH Deluxe so I thought a quick start guide for these folks would be a good idea. This guide is not meant for the hardcore folks who have been around for a while and I claim no special knowledge of the P5W DH Deluxe, these are my own experiences in OCing with this board. Please note I am running the 1602 BIOS, you may have some slightly different options depending on your BIOS version!

The screen shots below will be familar once you go into your BIOS and start looking around at all of the options ASUS has given us to play with. The most important thing for people new to OCing to remember is do not change something in the BIOS without knowing what it does, you can get yourself into trouble quickly. That being said you also need to keep in mind that most of us learned by breaking stuff :-/

We'll take the screen shots one at a time with a breakdown on the important stuff under each image.



First up is System Frequency and Voltage. Setting AI Overclocking to manual will allow you to change CPU Frequency and DRAM Frequency. As you can see my rig is running a 350 Mhz FSB which is yeilding a 875Mhz DDR2 Frequency. Keep in mind your dealing with DDR2 ram so applications like CPU-Z will show half of this speed or 438Mhz for the ram. We are also dealing with Intel's quad pumped FSB so expect to see 1400 Mhz for the FSB using CPU-Z. My chip is the C2Duo E6600 so my multiplier is 9 which gives you FSB x 9 = CPU speed or 350 x 9 = 3150Mhz which you will see below on the following screens.

Next up is the PCI-E Frequency which is your video card slot speed and below that is the PCI Clock Frequency for the rest of your boards expansion slots. I will not be explaining these in detail, there are dozens of threads in these forums dealing with both. Suffice it to say you want to lock them as I have to keep your motherboard slots/components from overclocking with the CPU and Memory.

We also see Memory voltage, CPU Core Voltage, FSB Termination Voltage, MCH and ICH chipset voltage (in the "old days" MCH and ICH where called Northbridge and Southbridge, generaly the Northbridge has a bigger heatsink on it). Memory and CPU voltages may or may not have to be raised depending on your components and what speeds your trying to achieve. Since my DDR2-800 ram is running at DDR2-875 I have found 2.05v to be a good spot for stability, I also locked in my CPU Core at 1.36v for the same reason. FSB and MCH have also been adjusted for the same reasons, primarily stability. The ICH or Southbridge does not generaly need additional voltage but I did do this guide showing why it may need to have thermal compound applied to keep things stable.



Next we have the Advanced CPU Settings page in the BIOS. This is where you will want to turn off a lot of the "power saving" features of the CPU because they have been known to interfere with overclocking results.

First you see the Modify Ratio setting, if your CPU allows you to adjust the multiplier you might find this setting useful in helping gain higher FSB speeds during your OCing attempts. Besides Microcode Updation I have shut everything else off on this page. Again if you want or need details on what these things do searching these Forums will most likely provide more data than you wanted.



Next up we have what I consider one of the more important areas of the BIOS to the overclocker, the Hardware Monitor settings page. I consider this important because you can set all of your fans to Performance Mode which will greatly improve your CPU and case cooling. As you can see I have everything but my Power Supply set to Performance. I recommend you do the same or get a fan bus so you can crank things up. Good case cooling is just as important as good CPU cooling.




Next up is the Advanced Chipset Settings page of the BIOS. Here you can turn off the SPD settings and program the BIOS to run specific timings for your memory. In this case you can see I chose the default timings for my Ram of 5-5-5-15 which is what Corsair rated my memory for at DDR2-800 speeds. If you remember I previously set my FSB bus to 350Mhz which gave me a memory divider option of DDR2-875Mhz or slower to run my Ram at, slower in this case was below the default speed of DDR2-800 so I chose to boost my voltage to run the higher memory speed.

You will also notice ECC mode (I don't know anyone running ECC Ram but someone might be :shrug: ), Hyperpath 3, DRAM Throttling, and Memory Remap. I suggest shutting them all off since Hyperpath 3 seems to limit some folks OCing, DRAM Throttling is self explainitory and Memory Remap is not needed by Windows XP.

Last but not least are the PEG Link features. This is an ASUS overclock feature that would normaly provide some small boost to your video card on a stock clocked machine. Since we are overclocking and you have locked the PCI-E bus at 100 I would set these to Normal or Auto as shown and move on to more important things.



Here we are at the last page of the BIOS and these settings are really user whim more than anything else. Probably the most useful item here is the ability to turn off the ASUS Full Screen Logo at start up so you can watch the POST process when you start your machine.


Hopefully you will find some use for this admittedly brief and basic guide to tweaking the P5W DH Deluxe. This should help the beginners out there get thier feet wet without causing any damage to your machine. Remember to take things slow and easy and make good use of these Forums for advice if you get stuck. Happy OCing :D
 
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Nice job man you covered everything very well.
I like this board alot, I would even say I like it better than the p5b deluxe I had.
 
Great post. I wish I had this a few days ago....would have saved Rattle a few posts in my favor!! (Thanks Rattle for all the help by the way...still tweaking a bit, but stable at 350x10).

One question I thought of while reading this though is around the fans. Since I turned OFF all the qfan stuff, my rig is loud all the time now. What is the benefit of the 4 lead fan and what is the extra lead for since this MB only has 3 leads on the fan connectors?

Ulrick65
 
ulrick65 said:
What is the benefit of the 4 lead fan and what is the extra lead for since this MB only has 3 leads on the fan connectors?

Ulrick65
I will update the guide, after some experimenting I found even the 3 pin leads are affecting fan speed so the 4th pin on the CPU most likely is just the sensor telling the motherboard the CPU fan is running. In any case if you turn QFan on and set it to Optimal it is supposed to run at a slower RPM (I think it probably just cuts back the voltage to the fan) until your rig hits a certain temp then it will pick back up. I like my case as cool as possible is where I want it to run but I'm using a bunch of pretty quiet 120's.

Rattle said:
Nice job man you covered everything very well.

UglyChild said:
I vote to make this guide *Sticky*.
Great job.

Thanks folks ;) A while back I posted asking someone to do a guide :eh?: Figured I'd share what I figured out through trial and error.
 
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Why cant I see any of the screenshots?
Got it, Zone Alarm was thinking they were adds and blocked them.

And yes this kinda giude is the best that can happen for us noobs! Thanks.
 
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MrWizard2U how are you making out on OCing your rig? I was following your other thread on this topic.
 
Now disabling all those things under CPU and RAM.. for real world performance such as gaming is it still ok to disable those? Or do you just disable it for the sheer fact of OCing?
 
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I run my rig 24/7 as posted above. I currently have Sin Episodes, Call of Duty2, BFME 2, Oblivion, Far Cry, Company of Heroes and good Ol' Halo installed and all of them run perfect with everything cranked up to maximum graphic splendor :burn:
 
Dragonprince said:
MrWizard2U how are you making out on OCing your rig? I was following your other thread on this topic.

I am a perfectionist by nature and learned that is a good thing with computers. Saves me a lot of time on fixing things. I am still preparing all the details. Made only one change in my BIOS so far and that is to remover the Asus flash screen to be able to see the posting.

Except for a couple of minor details I got the strategy all sorted out. Hoping to get the answers from some of you guys an then I can start.

One of the answers I am looking for is the link to ORTHOS? Cant seem to be able to find it anywhere. No point in doing anything untill I can test the results.

The other is this memory ratio of 2.66? I dont even have an idea of what this is let alone where and how to do it.

And the last is if I start FSB at 275 do I leave the voltages stock until more is required or do I just raise the voltages immediately anyway by a fraction or full or relative to the OC level?
 
I believe 266 is the stock FSB speed for the C2D chips, remember the Intel FSB is Quad pumped so 266 x 4 = 1066. The memory divider refers to the memory freq's you have to choose from when you make adjustments to the FSB speed. Looking at the first photo I posted above you see I picked 350 for the FSB which gave a memory speed option of 875 and some others which you can pick from by tabbing onto 875 and using the + - keys. It seems misleading to use the term "ratios" as if you can pick anyone you want when in reality the motherboard has only a few dividers which change the selectable memory frequency concurrent with changes to the FSB speed.

As far as the voltages I would leave everything stock until you start pushing your memory which should need more voltage only if your going well above DDR2-800 speeds. Most of the C2D chips seem to go up about 500Mhz or so before requiring even a small voltage increase. The MCH voltage probably does not need any extra juice until the CPU does. Testing for stability between changes, keeping an eye on heat and going slow are really the keys to good overclocking results.

I don't use Orthos myself I usually run real world app's like video conversion and BOINC to test for stability. If I can process 4 gigs of video and run BOINC for days at a time without a hiccup I doubt Orthos would shake out anything. Occassionaly I make some runs with 3DMarks but thats really only when I'm overclocking my video card and need to test stability. Some of the more "hardcore" guys swear by Orthos so it may suit your needs.
 
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