king smp
Splendid
yologelo :
My corsair vengeance 12GB 3x4gb just arrived
and I've just fitted it aswell i think its running at 1600 dual channel and the other on 964 or something cant remember. When I did the printscreen I had 4x2GB crucial 1066mhz dd3 rams which I now replaced with the vengeance.
I got the 12GB because i got it a lot cheaper than the 8GB but I'd probably take out one of the stick so I can run on dual channel only what do you guys think?
would you mind explaining what NB, I still have a lot to learn xD I've manage to get my pc now into 3.6ghz with 1.375v so thats a lot better than 1.45v havnt tried prime 95 but manage to play bf3 on ultra without a problem since I have a crossfire x 6850's

I got the 12GB because i got it a lot cheaper than the 8GB but I'd probably take out one of the stick so I can run on dual channel only what do you guys think?

would you mind explaining what NB, I still have a lot to learn xD I've manage to get my pc now into 3.6ghz with 1.375v so thats a lot better than 1.45v havnt tried prime 95 but manage to play bf3 on ultra without a problem since I have a crossfire x 6850's

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quote
"When you overclock your CPU, the higher you go the more likely you will need to stabilize the CPU-NB. What do I mean by this? As the CPU increases its speed to calculate data, so must the speed of which the CPU communicates with other components on the Motherboard: chipset, memory, etc. Let me take the classic example of a 4.0 GHz 940BE and its CPU-NB. If you were to leave the CPU-NB at 1.8 GHz stock then the data calculated by the CPU would create a bottleneck and thus resulting in errata errors or CPU errors. So in order to balance these speeds a CPU-NB clock of 3.0 GHz would be needed. In most cases of high OC’s that result in crashes; the CPU-NB is usually the culprit."
source - http://www.overclockers.com/forums [...] 23&page=10
"The northbridge has historically been one of the two chips in the core logic chipset on a PC motherboard, the other being the southbridge. Increasingly these functions have migrated to the CPU chip itself, beginning with memory and graphics controllers. For Intel Sandy Bridge and AMD Fusion processors introduced in 2011, all of the functions of the northbridge reside on the CPU.[1] When a separate northbridge is employed in older Intel systems, it is named memory controller hub (MCH) or integrated memory controller hub (IMCH) if equipped with an integrated VGA."
source - http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Northbridge_(computing)
basically the NB is a bus that allows communication from the CPU to other parts of the motherboard like memory,PCIe etc
AMD CPUs like a higher NB speed when OCing
generally can reach between 2600-3000mhz
also will need to increase the CPU-NB up to 1.2/1.3v