http://www.nvidia.com/object/sysutility_1.0
read that some people are having incorrect voltages read.
going to take a look at it now :)
New drivers soon as well :)
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http://www.nvidia.com/object/sysutility_1.0
read that some people are having incorrect voltages read.
going to take a look at it now :)
New drivers soon as well :)
Excellent; I shall be downloading that this evening - thanks for the link.
Thanks for that Agent, looks good, am studying it now ;)
Overclocking within windows eh!
Cool idea for those little tweaks :)
Not sure about pc probes accuracy sometime too so it will be interesting to compare
Nice utlilty :D
what happens if i clock too far and reboot though?
Does BIOS 19 for NF7-S V2.0 support the voltage, fan speed etc. section & the Advanced overclocking page (because 14 obviously doesn't)?
nice link cheers mate d/loading atm
Heh, 5Mb in 16 Seconds :D
/pats system
only 18 here.
minutes
would this work on the nf7-s rev1.1? as it says only these:
Supported products:
NVIDIA nForce?2 Ultra 400
NVIDIA nForce2 400
of which the rev1.1 is neither :(
Seems like a pretty cool little proggie, even tho my motherboard (8RDA3+) is listed under "Full product functionality..." I still don't get all the options. It can't seem to recognise my mobo... hmmm, I don't think I have done anything wrong.... Let me fiddle....
:) Gigabyte's 7VAX KT400 offered o/c'ing from within Windows and it was very sweet. My CPU's voltage is reported as 1.70v when it is in fact 1.55v but I think I threw it off since I'm using an undervolted Barton. Still seems nice enough, esp as it seems it lets you tweak some RAM timings (now that is amazing). nVidia probably only certify it for 400 & Ultra400, probably requires some slight modification in order to work which most likely is lacking on the original nF2 mobos. Anyway for first release (1.0) it seems very good indeed.Quote:
Originally posted by SmileyUK
Overclocking within windows eh!
Cool idea for those little tweaks :)
Not sure about pc probes accuracy sometime too so it will be interesting to compare
hmm interesting...
this gives loads of info bout ur ram - even the module codes!
i can use basic clocking page.. which is just fsb and timings except cas.
the second page, which seems it might be advanced clocking, isnt clickable, maybe cos my mobo is nf7-s rev1.1 not a rev2... or need newer bios? i think im using 1.9
;) Doesn't let me click that mystery tab either. I'm using Abit NF7-S v2.0 with BIOS 19 (which is less than a week old).
Looks like we need BIOS support for Advanced page plus voltage & temps.
hmmm, updated my bios and i still don't get all the advanced options..
Most mobo makers will have a new BIOS to take full advantage of this utility :)
Where does it show you the vlotage austin ? I have a feeling i cany see much info because i have an MSI board
All i can get is fsb/agp and ram timings
all i get is fsb and ram timings aswell, just managed 2.34ghz with it though :D
:) At the bottom all the time which can be shown/hidden via the icon on bottom right (looks like a spreadsheet symbol). Anyway I get ...Quote:
Originally posted by Lexeus
Where does it show you the voltage austin ? I have a feeling i cany see much info because i have an MSI board
* CPU temp.
* System temp.
* Voltage: CPU, AGP, RAM, NF(?) and AUX.
* Speed in mhz for: RAM, FSB and AGP.
It seems I can adjust ...
* FSB/RAM bus.
* AGP bus.
* RAM timings for: TRP, TRCD and TRAS (so only CL really lacking).
:cool: Under 'I' (Info) tab I get lots of info on the CPU, RAM sticks, mobo, MCP, SPP and driver versions.
NF7-S v2.
Cant access the advanced screen, and when I try and set my changes it hangs.
Whats the point in AGP frequency btw - does it speed your gfx card up at all?
um, well i downloaded it in 5 :).Quote:
Originally posted by Donny John
Heh, 5Mb in 16 Seconds :D
/pats system
and considering i usually get at least 32mbit, i think the bottlenecks at their end.
yes i am on janet :)!
dgr
What's Janet? :confused:
5 Secs. Nice, but hard to believe btw :p (we have 2Mb access)
Janet is the education network for the internet.
Mainly used in Unis and abused by students :p
;) It's the speed of the gfx port for the gfx card to communicate with the rest of the PC. It is designed to be 2xPCI which is 2x33.3mhz so equals 66.6mhz. The AGP multiplier also takes effect so AGP4x is 4x66.6=266mhz while AGP8x is 8x66.6=533mhz. However don't expect any gains even if using AGP4x as 266mhz is enough bandwidth for even the top end cards that's why AGP8x shows < 1% perf gains. It's the speed and internal implimentation of the gfx card that counts for perf, not the speed out of the gfx port. All you're likely to do by running AGP faster than 66mhz is introduce instability.Quote:
Originally posted by amoeba
Whats the point in AGP frequency btw - does it speed your gfx card up at all?
nice to see a system utility that reports the on die temps though :)
Been waiting for something like this for a while, nice linkage.
Fix
For my NF7-S v2.0 i updated the BIOS to v19, was on v16 or something and my temps have gone up again! (by about 10c!). Oh and the nVidia thing can't do the temps for it, it just stays at 60c die and 50c system.
:eek: wat internet connection u hotQuote:
Originally posted by Donny John
Heh, 5Mb in 16 Seconds :D
/pats system
We are looking at 0.3125MB/Sec.
So its 2.5Mbit line approx.
Or a much faster connection, shared.
(My uni connection match that)
Err are we going off topic a bit here ;)
NTL Grid/Intranet Broadband 2Mb+ crap. Actually it's quite good (at times), don't tell NTL that though ;)Quote:
Originally posted by s4ch117
:eek: wat internet connection u hot