change mem speeds w/ A7V?

Sharky Forums


Results 1 to 8 of 8

Thread: change mem speeds w/ A7V?

  1. #1
    Tiger Shark
    Join Date
    Dec 2000
    Location
    NY, USA
    Posts
    513

    Post change mem speeds w/ A7V?

    I'm just wondering if I'm missing something here..In the A7V bios 1005A, to change the mem settings, you have these options.

    user define
    7ns (143 2-2-2)
    8ns (125 2-2-2)
    by spd

    I'm using 143 2-2-2, the user define option only lets you change the cas latency, not the mhz, so is there a way to change the mhz, if I wanted to try and hit 150 2-2-2, can you do that with an A7V? thanks..

    ------------------
    ~OC CRUSADERS~

  2. #2
    Tiger Shark
    Join Date
    Nov 2000
    Location
    Marietta, Georgia, USA
    Posts
    835

    Post

    The only way to increase memory speed with the A7V is to increase the FSB (cpu speed in BIOS) or to purchase PC150 memory. Keep in mind that raising the FSB also raises the clock speed of AGPcard, PCI cards, and hard drives. Your memory benchmarks at 7ns 143MHz should be very good with good quality RAM.

    ------------------
    "Listen. Strange women lying in ponds distributing swords is no basis for a system of government. Supreme executive power derives from a mandate from the masses, not from some farcical aquatic ceremony."
    "Listen. Strange women lying in ponds distributing swords is no basis for a system of government. Supreme executive power derives from a mandate from the masses, not from some farcical aquatic ceremony."

  3. #3
    Hammerhead Shark
    Join Date
    Dec 2000
    Location
    Pittsburgh, PA
    Posts
    1,984

    Post

    Actually, even buying faster memory won't make the memory run faster. You have to set the memory to run at fsb+pci clock, after which upping the fsb speed (which will also increase the pci bus speed) will significantly boost your memory's speed.

    ------------------
    OC Knight of the OC Crusaders

    ABit KT7-Raid
    AMD Duron 600@1066 (101x10.5)
    FOP38-1 w/ Arctic Silver
    256 MB of Micron CL=3 PC133@135, CL=2
    30 GB IBM Deskstar GXP75
    Ricoh 8x4x32x CD-RW 7080A
    Pioneer 16x Slot DVD-105
    GeForce2 GTS (230/394)
    Diamond MX300 (Vortex2)
    7650 3DMarks (Mad Onion's 3DMark 2000)
    Larry
    EPoX 8RDA+ (A1) | AMD Athlon XP-M [email protected] (213x11) | 1GB PC3200 | 30GB Maxtor, 14GB IBM, 200GB Maxtor | 7-in-1 card reader | Memorex 52x CD-RW | Radeon 9800Pro (XT Core) + VGA Silencer | Samsung SyncMaster 997DF + NEC MultiSync FP912SB

    Lucy
    ABit KT7A-RAID 1.0 | AMD Athlon XP-M [email protected] (145x16.5) | 1.25GB CL2 PC133 | 2x80GB WD RAID-0, 180GB WD, 30GB IBM | HP 300n DVD Burner | Radeon 9700Pro + VGA Silencer | Turtle Beach Santa Cruz | Samsung SyncMaster 753DF + Dell 1704FPV

  4. #4
    Hammerhead Shark
    Join Date
    Dec 2000
    Location
    Pittsburgh, PA
    Posts
    1,984

    Post

    Also, you can check the mainboard information module in sandra, and it should tell you at what speed that your memory is running.
    Larry
    EPoX 8RDA+ (A1) | AMD Athlon XP-M [email protected] (213x11) | 1GB PC3200 | 30GB Maxtor, 14GB IBM, 200GB Maxtor | 7-in-1 card reader | Memorex 52x CD-RW | Radeon 9800Pro (XT Core) + VGA Silencer | Samsung SyncMaster 997DF + NEC MultiSync FP912SB

    Lucy
    ABit KT7A-RAID 1.0 | AMD Athlon XP-M [email protected] (145x16.5) | 1.25GB CL2 PC133 | 2x80GB WD RAID-0, 180GB WD, 30GB IBM | HP 300n DVD Burner | Radeon 9700Pro + VGA Silencer | Turtle Beach Santa Cruz | Samsung SyncMaster 753DF + Dell 1704FPV

  5. #5
    Tiger Shark
    Join Date
    Dec 2000
    Location
    NY, USA
    Posts
    513

    Post

    Originally posted by The WhiteRabbit:
    Also, you can check the mainboard information module in sandra, and it should tell you at what speed that your memory is running.
    ok I looked at it in sandra, and it said the mem was running at 138, I saw that when I was changing the bus speeds, fsb 104, dram 138, so why does it give the option for 7ns 143, in the advanced chip menu?

    ------------------
    ~OC CRUSADERS~

  6. #6
    Demon Dog Shark sww's Avatar
    Join Date
    Sep 2000
    Posts
    7,090

    Post

    Actually the memory speed is set in two places. The one that you're referring to is just where you tell your BIOS what kind of RAM you have. The second, in the Advanced Menu, actually determines whether the RAM runs at FSB or at FSB+PCI. You're just giving settings to the BIOS (in a simplifed way) so that it knows how to use the memory.

    ------------------
    Something like 37% of statistics are made up out of thin air.

  7. #7
    Tiger Shark
    Join Date
    Dec 2000
    Location
    NY, USA
    Posts
    513

    Post

    Originally posted by sww:
    Actually the memory speed is set in two places. The one that you're referring to is just where you tell your BIOS what kind of RAM you have. The second, in the Advanced Menu, actually determines whether the RAM runs at FSB or at FSB+PCI. You're just giving settings to the BIOS (in a simplifed way) so that it knows how to use the memory.

    so what would be the optimum setting in the advanced menu.. user define, 7ns 143 or spd? I realize the dram freqency in the bios is at 138, that means its set for pc133, it raised with the fsb..I'm still not clear on the settings in the advanced menu

    ------------------
    ~OC CRUSADERS~

  8. #8
    Hammerhead Shark
    Join Date
    Dec 2000
    Location
    Montreal, Qc, Canada
    Posts
    1,543

    Post

    yep..overclock the fsb and you oc the ram...its how it goes..

    ~Share the knowledge~

    ------------------
    OC Soldier
    Sys1:[email protected]/256m/Radeon64m
    Sys2[email protected]/128m/ASUSv710032m
    Sys33800@896/128m/Radeon32mSDR
    Sys4:Cel400@498/96m/Rage16m
    Sys52-233@233/128m/Gf32mDDR

    Mr.White's Page
    - I think my men can take care of one little penguin. - No Mr. Gates, your men are already dead. -
    You don't have the guts to be what you wanna be, you need people like me, you need people like me so you can point your frign fingers and say that's the bad guy..So say goodnight to the bad guy, it's the last time your guna see a bad guy like this again.

    System & Benchmark's. *New screenies* - Now with AMD Soldiers Screenies

    MY AMD Platform System Detail's

Posting Permissions

  • You may not post new threads
  • You may not post replies
  • You may not post attachments
  • You may not edit your posts
  •