Gigabyte GA-X48T-DQ6

by Rajinder Gill on December 24, 2007 9:00 AM EST

Video and Memory Settings

Our ASUS 8800 GTS 640MB graphics card has always shown excellent potential for overclocking when using sub-zero cooling. It was a 'no brainer' to put the combination of the QX9650 and the 8800 GTS together, in order to see what could be achieved. Our initial goal was to aim for around 450FSB while keeping memory speeds around DDR3-1800MHZ using CAS 7 timings. We tried in vain to get the board to clock our OCZ modules at CAS 7 or 6 when running the CPU over 4.5GHz. Eventually we decided to leave the primary memory timings loose at CAS 8-8-8-20 using the 1:2 memory divider and the 1333 Northbridge strap. It seemed that the board prefers to overclock at CAS 8 at this point in development. We eventually settled for 8-7-7-20 timings using a command rate of 1N and the 11X multiplier. This allowed the memory to clock above DDR1900 easily, and the board held speeds up to 485FSB stable for benchmarking. We fully expect to hit 500FSB with this particular processor once Gigabyte has tuned the BIOS.

Our other option was to use the 12x multiplier and a lower FSB to raise CPU speeds over 5GHz average, again, this did not work out well for us - the board either would not boot or would crash as we raised FSB rates within XP or the BIOS. Admittedly, we ran out of time trying to work out what combination of chipset/memory parameters are required to run the higher CPU multipliers. In general, current 12MB cache processors seem to have a lower FSB limit than previous generation 65nm 8MB cache CPU's. Gigabyte has done a remarkable job in maintaining FSB scalability on the larger cache processors even when benchmarking at high CPU speeds. Although the 640MB 8800 GTS is an aging graphics card, it is still capable of some very respectable benchmark scores. As we are relatively new to extreme cooling, we would have been happy on the mediocre side of the fence, but armed with this board we managed a clean sweep of current 3D benchmark records with a single 8800 GTS 640MB. We do not expect our position to last long; there are a number of benchmarkers breathing down our necks with LN2 cooling. Here are the results we managed with the GA-X48T-DQ6...

Super PI 1M



3DMark 2001SE



3DMark 2003



3DMark 2005



3DMark 2006



Aquamark 3



Please note Aquamark 3 seems to exhibit a 'bug' when FSB changes are made using OS level overclocking software. Hence the CPU and GPU scores are listed as 'N/A'. While these synthetic benchmark scores do not represent results from actual applications, they are a very good indicator of a board's true performance capability. As we will find out in our follow up article, Gigabyte is bringing one very fast board to market in the next 60 days. The only question left is if it is faster than the new ASUS X48 boards, we will answer that in the very near future.

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  • Rajinder Gill - Monday, December 24, 2007 - link

    http://ld-phasechange.com/images/cascade_rotary/31...

    that's the bigger unit that I had to use on the GPU. It's too cold for the QX9650... The smaller unit is open without a case.. No pics on hand atm.. Drop me an email to remind me and I'll send them down when I get time...

    regards
    Raja
  • GSpokes - Tuesday, August 9, 2011 - link

    Anyone have one of these they want to sell? Must be in working order... drop me an e-mail to goldspokes at g m a i l . c o m

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