HP informed me that motherboards that come with HP desktops have something that disables any form of CPU overclocking. GPU overclocking works fine.
So they told me that if I want to overclock my CPU at all, I would have to buy a new motherboard. [strike]So it looks like I have to buy a new motherboard[/strike] there has to be some way around this. Because I don't want to waste my money on a new motherboard.
I figured I could just overclock it a little to get a taste of overclocking before shelling out the bucks for a brand new heatsink.
So how do I escape HP's hell of anti-overclocking?
EDIT: I heard before that you need at least DDR2 800 MHz ram to overclock. Is this true, or is my configuration (two 667 MHz 1 GB modules and one 800 MHz 1 GB module) fine?
So they told me that if I want to overclock my CPU at all, I would have to buy a new motherboard. [strike]So it looks like I have to buy a new motherboard[/strike] there has to be some way around this. Because I don't want to waste my money on a new motherboard.
I figured I could just overclock it a little to get a taste of overclocking before shelling out the bucks for a brand new heatsink.
So how do I escape HP's hell of anti-overclocking?
EDIT: I heard before that you need at least DDR2 800 MHz ram to overclock. Is this true, or is my configuration (two 667 MHz 1 GB modules and one 800 MHz 1 GB module) fine?