Hi, Clunky, and thanks for the guide. You shouldn't get ratty with newbie overclockers asking questions. After all, you chose to write a guide for '
Beginners'.
I'm not ratty. This is ratty.
I have read your guide and all the comments, and I am pretty sure that the questions I asked before are not answered. If they are, just please bear with me and try to help. (Of course, that's optional, it's up to you.)
Along with lots of beginner overclockers, my aims are:
First, a modest speed increase - I am not after the last clock cycle
Second, a stable system at the end of it
Third, modest cost.
Bearing these 3 points in mind, can you confirm or deny the following propositions, please. All I ask is a simple yes/no/don't know.
E4300 or E6300? : E4300 is better for overclocking.
I would say the E4300 if you dont need virtualisation technology
Use standard heatsink? : I know that proprietary heatsinks are better. (I built the present system with a Zalman Flower, and very nice it is too.) Can I reasonably expect to get a 50% overclock on the E4300 with a standard heatsink?
As I mentioned in the second line of the guide "The stock Intel coolers are fine for running at stock speeds, but they aren’t too great for overclocking." What I mean by this is that they are noisy and inefficient. You may get a mild overclock, but if your cpu is one of the ones that needs more volts than normal, then you will really struggle with the stock cooler. Again, search the forums, there are hundreds of posts about coolers as well
RAM: Will DDR2 5400 be okay?
Or will I be cursing because I should have ordered something a tad faster?
This is definately covered in the guide - "To give you a rough idea of what Ram to buy, PC2-6400 ram, will give you a theoretical CPU overclock of 3.6ghz on an E6600/E4300, 3.2ghz on an E6400 and 2.8ghz on an E6300, these figures represent the maximum CPU overclock without even overclocking the ram. More on the ins and outs of that later on.
For the purposes of overclocking, grab yourself something like PC2-6400 ram as a minimum, try and avoid cheap, unbranded, generic RAM, from experience, it is more trouble than it is worth. RAM is quite cheap at the time of writing this guide (13/03/07), so no need to scrimp on the RAM either really."
I hope that sheds some light on it for you.
I need to try to get the CPU and RAM choice right first time. If I try it with the stock cooler and it doesn't work, I can always go out and buy a new cooler afterwards.