Edited by shane_vt87, 08 October 2008 - 03:41 AM.

New Pc
#1
Posted 08 October 2008 - 03:40 AM
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#2
Posted 09 October 2008 - 04:03 AM
I would go with Vista x64, myself. That system looks like a screamer, once you get your driver issues sorted, you should be getting great performance from it.
It looks like Catalyst 8.9 is now out, here's the link to Vista x64 drivers.
Have you tried installing the display driver only? The whole catalyst suite?
Cheers
Troy
#3
Posted 10 October 2008 - 04:36 AM
Edited by shane_vt87, 10 October 2008 - 03:37 PM.
#4
Posted 11 October 2008 - 03:34 AM
The thing that springs immediately to mind if you are suspicious of your cpu is the motherboard bios. Did you use the one that it shipped with or did you grab a recent one from here?
Oh, and did you OC the quad? Does is recognise it as the right cpu in the bios / POST text?
Just in case (apologies if Im teaching my grandmother to suck eggs here) here is a tutorial to flashing bios on this kind of gigbyte board.
#5
Posted 11 October 2008 - 04:58 PM
Edited by shane_vt87, 11 October 2008 - 05:00 PM.
#6
Posted 12 October 2008 - 12:01 AM
The stock heatsink would be able to handle it, but I would strongly consider upgrading, as the quad would be running rather hot, even though it is only a relatively small overclock.
For your CPU verification, have you downloaded CPU-Z? What does it report?
And the "Very High" setting that is unavailable in XP, is because XP does not support DirectX 10 - but Vista does. Selecting "Very High" will enable all the fancy extras DirectX 10 adds to the game, but only available within Vista.
Just because you've heard of people having problems with Catalyst version 8.9, is no reason not to try it yourself. Make sure you have the x64 edition of the drivers. Make sure to fully uninstall the old drivers before installing the new ones.
I look forward to your next update.
Troy
#7
Posted 17 October 2008 - 05:20 PM
#8
Posted 18 October 2008 - 06:46 PM
#9
Posted 19 October 2008 - 11:45 PM
#10
Posted 20 October 2008 - 05:28 AM
That's great news that your system is running good. I'm at a loss as to why your system is not correctly identifying the CPU, but I am glad CPU-Z is reporting it. Before I comment further on your CPU-Z results, those pictures would be really good for me to see. I'll wait until you attach and upload them before commenting further.
Yes that's exactly on the mark, it's called Intel's Speedstep Technology, and scales performance down when it isn't needed. This isn't anything to worry about at all.Is the machine down-scaling the CPU performance to save power when the machine is sitting idle/not being used for CPU intesive tasks???
I currently don't have a similar setup to what you have, so I can't comment on your 3DMark results. Do be advised, though, that this is just a synthetic benchmark - what matters more is that you are seeing good performance in your everyday uses (such as playing Crysis).
Cheers
Troy
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#11
Posted 20 October 2008 - 08:36 PM
Edited by shane_vt87, 20 October 2008 - 08:44 PM.
#12
Posted 21 October 2008 - 03:31 PM
#13
Posted 21 October 2008 - 06:17 PM
Here is the support link for the ram i have installed: http://www.corsair.c...pport_tips.aspx,
and product details: http://www.corsair.c...048-8500C5D.pdf
I checked in the bios and the latency timings were set to 5-7-7-24. I went ahead and changed them to the correct timings 5-5-5-15. The bios memory frequency was correct, 1066MHz. Was this the correct thing to do??
Could the memory issue be because i have 4X1Gb sticks installed???
should i change to 2X2Gb sticks.
I checked a few forums and alot of people are having trouble with this exact set of RAM and this Mobo (GA-X48-DS4) complaining that their system is unstable. I have had no stability issues with the memory, i just want the memory to run at its specified SPD.
Cheers
Shane
#14
Posted 22 October 2008 - 07:13 PM
#15
Posted 23 October 2008 - 07:08 AM
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