Overclocking Performance

Overclocking Performance - P965

We have already reviewed the overclocking capabilities of each board in detail during our review of the boards' feature sets if addtional information is required about the results. As a recap our ASUS P5B-E 1.02G motherboard is our top overclocking board. It is able to overclock further with our GEIL PC2-6400 memory than the ASUS P5B-E 1.01G board due to the additional memory voltage options. The Biostar TForce P965 board is limited to 500FSB due to its BIOS options. Our Gigabyte GA-965P-DS3 is limited to the 450FSB range due to issues overclocking our Micron D9 1GB modules and the Abit AB9-Pro is just limited at this time. We will now take a look at how our boards performed in a few of our standard benchmarks while overclocked.



Click to enlarge

Our end results are not that surprising as the higher you overclock a system the greater its performance will be and in this case that means the ASUS P5B-E 1.02G walks away with the trophy. In our application benchmarks that tend to be very CPU intensive we see the benefits of overclocking as our Nero Recode test shows an improvement of 16% on average with our WinRAR tests showing upwards of a 36% increase in performance. Our audio encoding test only showed an improvement of 11% but this is due to the fact that the CPU was waiting on the optical drive during the encoding process as it takes two minutes and three seconds to extract the audio files. In our Sandra memory results we see the Gigabyte GA-965P-DS3 having the highest Unbuffered results which directly translates to its class leading performance in our benchmarks. We also took notice of the very consistent performance from the Biostar TForce P965 Deluxe board which has the second highest Sandra Unbuffered test results.

In our gaming benchmarks we see differences of 7% in Quake 4, up to 38% in Battlefield 2, and 59% in the older Serious Sam II title. This trend shows a definite improvement in the CPU/GPU balanced titles with little improvement in a title like Quake 4 that is already becoming GPU limited at 1280x1024. We implemented 4xAA in Quake 4 and the game shows no real differences in performance once it becomes GPU limited. Battlefield 2 still shows a 22% improvement but the spread between the Abit board and the ASUS 1.02G board is only 1% even though there is a 19% difference in the overclocking speed of the boards. Serious Sam II becomes GPU limited in a hurry when implementing 4xAA/8xAF settings although the frame rates are still very good.

Our opinion is that unless you are benchmarking to impress your friends and colleagues or are not GPU limited then there are few real gaming advantages to overclocking a system with the latest components. This basically means that to a certain degree you should invest in a very good GPU first and then start looking at the platform components based upon your timeline for keeping the system. Over time overclocking can become advantageous as you upgrade the GPU and simply overclock the system to improve CPU and memory performance. This can help extend the life of your main system components while allowing you to spend your money wisely during an upgrade cycle. Of course, there are those of us who throw this entire theory out the window (Ed: the author does this everyday!) every time a new component is introduced.

Gaming Performance - RTS & Simulation Disk Controller Performance
Comments Locked

62 Comments

View All Comments

  • smn198 - Monday, October 23, 2006 - link

    quote:

    we utilize a four hard drive setup and a three drive combination for our RAID 5 testing

    Would you be able to re-run using 4 drives for all of the tests please?
  • jonp - Sunday, October 22, 2006 - link

    -- “…budget sector and includes boards from ECS, Foxconn, Intel, and Gigabyte.” – will the MSI P965 Neo-F be in this set?

    -- the Abit AB9 Pro feature set does not show the eSata port on the SI 3132 (two SATA). it does show a serial port on the i/o panel but not one in the picture.

    -- The Biostar feature set shows 4 USB on the i/o panel when there are six in the picture.
  • JarredWalton - Sunday, October 22, 2006 - link

    Fixed - thanks.
  • powchi - Saturday, October 21, 2006 - link

    Can I use a 20-pin power supply on these boards since all are using 24-pin connectors? Or will I be needing 20pin to 24pin adaptor?

    The PSU is an Enermax NoiseTaker EG475P-VE SFMA 470W ATX 12V v1.3.
  • Aikouka - Sunday, October 22, 2006 - link

    Some motherboard manufacturers will no longer support your motherboard if they find out you've been running it with a 20-pin ATX plug or a 20->24-pin adapter. Just be safe and get a newer PSU :). I know DFI will no longer support the motherboard if it specifically asks for a 24-pin.
  • JarredWalton - Saturday, October 21, 2006 - link

    Technically, yes you can use 20-pin PSUs. Will they work, and will the system be stable? That varies. I haven't had any issues on the systems where I've done it, but if you do high overclocking it will likely become a serious issue.
  • powchi - Saturday, October 21, 2006 - link

    Jarred,

    So there's no need to use a 20pin to 24pin adaptor? What are the differences when using and not using an adaptor? Thanks.
  • lopri - Sunday, October 22, 2006 - link

    No. As a matter of fact, the adapter should be avoided. Just plug the 20-pin connector to 24-pin receptacle with 4-pin left empty. Like Jarred said, it should work in theory and it does in practice. However, the quality of PSU and how intense is one's OC can affect the (long-term) stability.
  • JarredWalton - Sunday, October 22, 2006 - link

    I suppose the adapter *could* help, as it ensures power is available on all the 24-pins, but you're still taking the power from the same source so depending on how that works out it can actually make things worse. I would typically say that if you have a 400W or better PSU you should be fine with little to moderate OC'ing even with 20-pins. (I have an OCZ ModStream 450W that certainly works fine in a 939 board with a decent 2.0 to 2.6 GHz overclock.)
  • lopri - Sunday, October 22, 2006 - link

    Yes! Not to brag about myself or anything, but I went through countless Socket 939 Opterons on DFI NF4 SLI-D with original Antec TruePower EPS12V (20-pins, not the TP2 with 24-pins) including an Opteron 165 @3.0GHz (9x333). TCCD up to 325MHz/2.5-4-3-8! The setup was absolutely stable.

Log in

Don't have an account? Sign up now