Mr. Tanhua, his is Athlon XP, not Thunderbird~~~
If you want to learn overclocking, you must first lock the PCI frequency, otherwise the PCI frequency is too high. Your PCI device is in danger! Overclocking is a very tedious, boring and mechanical thing, so you need a little patience.
Secondly, heat dissipation must be done well.
Then it officially started.
First divide the CPU memory by 1:1 (your current ratio is 4:6), then you can first eliminate the problem of poor memory quality (HY, right-#)< /p>
Add the frequency multiplier to 12X, and increase the FSB bit by bit. Don’t worry, it’s best to set it to 5MHz each time. If it can boot successfully, enter the system and test the super pi 104w. Bit. After probably stabilizing, increase it until you find the highest FSB. Then increase the frequency multiplier, lower the FSB accordingly, test the super pi again, lower it a little more, and test again. After many attempts, you will find the best value for your machine (FSB * maximum multiplier), that is Your CPU has reached its limit!
Then calculate the frequency that your memory should be at at that time. The algorithm is the CPU's FSB * 2 and then divide it by the CPU memory frequency division (such as the FSB 155, the CPU memory frequency division 1:1, that is) 155*2/1:1=ddr310), your memory is DDR400, theoretically it should be able to be improved a little bit, but the memory quality of HY is not very good, so it is not recommended to exceed it. If your limit is 155 FSB * 13 multiplier = 2G, adjust the frequency division to 5:6, then the memory working frequency is 155 * 2/5: 6 = DDR372, then the memory working frequency is not high, and the CPU Can also work overclocked. If you still choose 4:6, then the memory will work under DDR465, which is undoubtedly a heavy load for memory with poor physical condition! So no.