CPU Overclocking Capabilities: The 45nm E8500 and QX9770 Exposed



Whatever the 780i may have lacked when it came to overclocking 45nm CPUs certainly does not apply to 790i. Achieving a stable 4.5GHz overclock using an E8500 was no problem at all for the EVGA board. Gaming at these speeds promises to be incredibly fast. This kind of overclock required water-cooling for the CPU, so be sure to upgrade your cooling if you want any chance of reaching these frequencies and retaining stability.



The EVGA 790i Ultra also handled our QX9770 sample with relative ease. We were able to benchmark and play games without incident at 400MHz FSB, our mark of excellence when it comes to quad-core overclocking. Tuning memory for DDR3-1600 operation at this speed using a 2:1 divider and 7-7-7-22 or even 6-6-6-18 timings is quite fast.  Unlike other Core2 Duo's, the QX9650 and QX9770 processors feature unlocked multipliers; 400 FSB is all you need when you can choose any multiplier you want.



We were surprised to see the 790i clocked 4GB of DDR3 to 2000MHz without much hassle. However, performance at this frequency was lacking, as the system seemed to perform more like DDR2-1000 at 5-5-5-12 timings than DDR3-2000. For overall performance, we found FSB clocks just south of 475MHz FSB proved best.



Memory at DDR3-1864 and a 45nm dual-core E8500 at about 4.2GHz (466x9) is a speedy combination. This is just about the spot where X48 with DDR3 begins to shine. It seems as though NVIDIA has been able to match Intel despite being several months late to the DDR3 party. You could argue the validity of that assessment of course; with the current price of DDR3 modules there's certainly no parties going on that we know of.

Enthusiast System Architecture and the Improved NVIDIA Control Panel Will NVIDIA's 3-way SLI Make us Stand Up and Beg for More?
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  • ATWindsor - Wednesday, March 19, 2008 - link

    I couldn't agree more, features is all well and good, but only if things works and are stable. No wonder people find it daunting to build a computer, even when you have done it several times you risk going into som "trap" with things not working the way it should, more focus on this in reviews please.

    AtW
  • theYipster - Tuesday, March 18, 2008 - link

    I agree with Lopri in every regard. AT needs to stop masquerading these technical showcase articles as reviews. In addition to what Lopri already mentioned, I would add that AT failed to a) address the long standing concerns held throughout the enthusiast community over nForce product quality (regarding the paragraph on PWM design... very undwerwhelming considering that it doesn't offer support to its claim) and b) failed to provide a fair assessment of the value proposition these boards provide. The article states that the 790i provides a noticeable step up in performance over previous generations, and that owners of previous boards would find upgrading worthwhile. This is a bold claim, as such an upgrade would cost nearly $1000 (when factoring in new DDR3 RAM) and would not even include a new CPU or graphics card. Yes, the NB runs a bit cooler and can OC a bit farther, but how and why is that worth $1000, even to the enthusiast who can afford it easily? Lets also consider the grander scheme of things. What worth is it for someone who enjoys the latest and greatest to spend $350 on a board when Nehalem will change all the rules in less than a year. At least previous generations (as well as Intel's X38) provide some shelf life.

    In any case, Overclock3d.net has a very informative review of the Striker II Extreme which covers almost everything Lopri mentioned.

  • ssiu - Tuesday, March 18, 2008 - link

    "The EVGA 790i Ultra also handled our QX9770 sample with relative ease. We were able to benchmark and play games without incident at 400MHz FSB, our mark of excellence when it comes to quad-core overclocking."

    That is a low standard of excellence for a high-end chip. The Q9300/Q9450 overclockers are going to cry.
  • greylica - Tuesday, March 18, 2008 - link

    Mwahaha, some will say :
    " Now we can finnaly play crysis ! "
    Well done, 66 fps...
  • n0nsense - Tuesday, March 18, 2008 - link

    We can for a very long time.
    I do it with 1920x1200 at all Med + 4AA
    I have the 680i (P5N32-E SLI) + E6300@2.8GHz (not the maximum, but lower fan speed = less noise) + 4GB OCZ ReaperX @ 800MHz 4-4-3-12 1T and single reference design 8800GT from ASUS at stock clock (the only modified sing, is stock cooler replaced with Arctic Cooling Accelero S1 which reduced card temp by 25C)
    As you can see MB - year old, CPU 1.5 years old.
    I can't tell you the exact fps, but it's completely smooth playing.
    I expect next generation to bring same smooth play at all very high + all filterings for existing games.

    BTW, where 9800x2 in SLI tests on this 790i ?
  • SpaceRanger - Tuesday, March 18, 2008 - link

    When do you think nVidia will be putting out these boards for AMD CPU's. The only thing I see for AMD CPU's are boards that support CROSSFIRE, but not SLI.
  • ap90033 - Tuesday, March 18, 2008 - link

    It just costs to MUCH. I got 8 GIGS DDR2 800 an E8400 and a Single 8800GTS 512 meg, and I have the CPU Running at 3.6 (I am looking to try 3.8 maybe) and I can play any game maxed except Crysis. I can play it at high at 1024x768. I looked at SLI but its to danged expensive, I had 1220$ to spend and decided to get the most performance for the money. I wish they would quit going up in price on these motherboards, hey Nvidia, you do know I can get a GREAT Overclockers motherboard with good features (NO SLI OF COURSE) for $80 right? Why would I pay $250+ more for the board, another $200+ more for DDR3 Ram, and another $250 for another 8800GTS just so "some" games would run 15% faster? Are you nuts??? 10-15% but it costs like $800 MORE???? I think Ill save my $800 or so and use it on my next video card upgrade, my next CPU upgrade, and the next video card upgrade after that! LOL
  • krnmastersgt - Tuesday, March 18, 2008 - link

    Because this isn't meant at the people that want the best price/performance, this is for the uber-high end user, the extreme benchmarker/extreme gamer, of course by your logic SLI and CrossFire are stupid wastes of money since the performance doesnt scale linearly, but this is meant for enthusiasts and therefore you shouldn't compare it with something like a P35 board.
  • crimson117 - Tuesday, March 18, 2008 - link

    As an example, I was helping configure a Dell for a home office user, non-gamer, no video editing, etc, but he was fairly well-off money-wise. While picking options, at one point I said something about some component being "plenty for most users" and he replied (in a nice way) "I'm not most users"; so we went with the upgraded version even though the price performance, especially for his usage pattern, didn't make fiscal sense.

    The moral is there are people out there who get satisfaction over having the absolute best no matter the price.

    Relatedly, an experiment found that people perceive $90 wine as tasting better than $10 wine, even when it was secretly http://www.news.com/8301-13580_3-9849949-39.html">the same exact wine.

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