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AGP Power option in BIOS

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pronoob

Member
Joined
Aug 13, 2004
AGP Power option in BIOS
Does that help increasing the Vcore and Vdimm : ) ?
 
Well here's how it is:
1) Vcore is the voltage that the cpu uses. You'll raise it slowly when overclocking whenever you get instability past a certain overclock. Just make sure your temps stay low.
2) Vdimm is the voltage going to the ram, and it helps you run lower ram timings or just run the ram at a faster speed. So if you're overclocking pc3200 ram which runs at200 Mhz to say 215. You'd either raise the vdimm or loosen your timings to make the ram stable. If your ram becomes unstable at those timings even with maxed out vdimm, then you start loosening the timings at the higher vdimm to get your ram to go even faster.
3) vagp, agp "power" doesn't run to the vidcard, but from my experience, it must run between the agp, pci, and the SB, and maybe somewhere else. Because raising the vagp at higher fsb's can help stablize your overclock. Raising it to 1.7V is usually sufficient and it usually helps at around 240-250 on the NF7.
 
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