Possible to soft-undervolt Asus AM2NPV-VM? (slightly urgent)
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Possible to soft-undervolt Asus AM2NPV-VM? (slightly urgent)
Hi,
I thought i had found the right parts for my parents HTPC ( see http://forums.silentpcreview.com/viewtopic.php?t=34102 ), but as usual finding a good mobo is causing problems. I was hoping to place the order tonight as my dad is really looking forward to his new HTPC(their DVD recorder broke down so they cant watch DVDs or record anything , hence the slight urgency.
I was originally betting on the Asus M2NPV-VM because it has Firewire, all the necessary TV out stuff(they will need this until they buy a new TV) and an onboard SPDIF header(for later upgrade to HDMI video card).
However, now i hear that the M2NPV-VM offers no vCore control in the BIOS, which is a serious problem. I was planning to do some serious undervolting using RMClock, do i need BIOS vcore support to do that, or will it work anyway?
I thought i had found the right parts for my parents HTPC ( see http://forums.silentpcreview.com/viewtopic.php?t=34102 ), but as usual finding a good mobo is causing problems. I was hoping to place the order tonight as my dad is really looking forward to his new HTPC(their DVD recorder broke down so they cant watch DVDs or record anything , hence the slight urgency.
I was originally betting on the Asus M2NPV-VM because it has Firewire, all the necessary TV out stuff(they will need this until they buy a new TV) and an onboard SPDIF header(for later upgrade to HDMI video card).
However, now i hear that the M2NPV-VM offers no vCore control in the BIOS, which is a serious problem. I was planning to do some serious undervolting using RMClock, do i need BIOS vcore support to do that, or will it work anyway?
Re: Possible to soft-undervolt Asus AM2NPV-VM? (slightly urg
As long as that motherboard fully supports Cool'n'Quiet you can change Vcore and CPU multiplier using software like RMClock. The only BIOS support required is that it enables Cool'n'Quiet.ziphnor wrote:However, now i hear that the M2NPV-VM offers no vCore control in the BIOS, which is a serious problem. I was planning to do some serious undervolting using RMClock, do i need BIOS vcore support to do that, or will it work anyway?
I have been thinking of gettin this board as an HTPC as well. I would like to get my hands on an AMD 3800+ EESFF if possible, but we'll see how it goes. I gotta say that I am extremely encouraged by the undervolting results you are all posting, but I was surprised when plympton said he is using around 80 watts(undervolted!). I read an article on Tom's Hardware that said 54W was possible with the same board, 2GB RAM, a Raptor HDD, etc.
(http://www.tomshardware.com/2006/09/25/ ... index.html)
I realize every system is different, but with the same core parts a difference of 26W is quite large, especially considering the undervolt. For a 24/7 system, 26W can add up over time, thus the knitpicking. So, my question is: Whats going on here? Do you have a video card in there? Or is Tom's talking outta their hiney as they sometimes do?
(http://www.tomshardware.com/2006/09/25/ ... index.html)
I realize every system is different, but with the same core parts a difference of 26W is quite large, especially considering the undervolt. For a 24/7 system, 26W can add up over time, thus the knitpicking. So, my question is: Whats going on here? Do you have a video card in there? Or is Tom's talking outta their hiney as they sometimes do?
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There's a bug in CrystalCPUID which if you have your hard drive suspended because of inactivity, then if it goes back to active mode, the voltage and the multiplier of the CPU will be set to maximum.Rusty075 wrote:CrystalCPUID works very well on that board. I prefer that program to RMClock, I think it's easier to use and more stable, but it's personal preference either way.
By sure to read jan's article about using CrystalCPUID to configure your own custom CnQ settings...its very helpful.
I email this to the author a while ago (it's always reproducible), but got no reply and no update for a few months ... at which time I found RMClock and stop checking. You may want to check if this is fix or not.
Note for the archives: Cpus don't have a 4x multiplier!
That Tom's article is a bit annoying - no details on what voltages they were running, etc. Disappointing - no way to reproduce the results!
After getting all kinds of crashes with RMClock - I finally figured out that RMClock is trying to set a 4x multiplier on my AM2 chip - BOOM! - down goes the system every time. Anything less than 0.800 volts and - BOOM!
Looks like I can get an 5x (1 GHz) with 0.800 volts and about 61 watts, and 10x (2 GHz) with 1.000 volts and about 70 watts. It survives a reboot (nice) so far, and feels pretty stable. Not sure the 9 watts is worth the hassle of the RMClock pain I had to go through, but oh-well-it's-done.
This is with 65w 3800+ EE AM2 proc,
1 GB Memory (1 stick, 667 MHz, Kingston),
500 GB WD SATA drive,
Stock cooler,
NSK 2400 with stock PS, and 1 120mm fan on low,
Cat's Eye DTA-150 Atsc tuner card,
Running Windows Media Center 2005, Rollup-2, etc..
If it survives standby's, boots up to make recordings on time, I'll be a happy guy. My Tivo used 22 watts 100% of the time - if this uses 70 watts, but only in use some of the time, it'll be a wash power wise, but I get ATSC in the deal!
-Dan
After getting all kinds of crashes with RMClock - I finally figured out that RMClock is trying to set a 4x multiplier on my AM2 chip - BOOM! - down goes the system every time. Anything less than 0.800 volts and - BOOM!
Looks like I can get an 5x (1 GHz) with 0.800 volts and about 61 watts, and 10x (2 GHz) with 1.000 volts and about 70 watts. It survives a reboot (nice) so far, and feels pretty stable. Not sure the 9 watts is worth the hassle of the RMClock pain I had to go through, but oh-well-it's-done.
This is with 65w 3800+ EE AM2 proc,
1 GB Memory (1 stick, 667 MHz, Kingston),
500 GB WD SATA drive,
Stock cooler,
NSK 2400 with stock PS, and 1 120mm fan on low,
Cat's Eye DTA-150 Atsc tuner card,
Running Windows Media Center 2005, Rollup-2, etc..
If it survives standby's, boots up to make recordings on time, I'll be a happy guy. My Tivo used 22 watts 100% of the time - if this uses 70 watts, but only in use some of the time, it'll be a wash power wise, but I get ATSC in the deal!
-Dan
Re: Note for the archives: Cpus don't have a 4x multiplier!
Well, apparently, MCE doesn't sleep/wake too well - it's always working too hard in the background to sleep (recording Live TV). You have to install all kinds of workaround to get it to sleep, and they don't work 100% (too fine a line between recording a program and just sitting there)plympton wrote: If it survives standby's, boots up to make recordings on time, I'll be a happy guy. My Tivo used 22 watts 100% of the time - if this uses 70 watts, but only in use some of the time, it'll be a wash power wise, but I get ATSC in the deal!
Also, waking from sleep last night, I got the jagged screen of death - scrambled video out. Probably because the voltage was too low (1.00v).
Looks like I'll live with 60-70w all the time... :-/.
-Dan
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Re: Note for the archives: Cpus don't have a 4x multiplier!
Is that the wall-socket power measured by a wattmeter (Power Angel, Kill A Watt), or some other measurement?plympton wrote:Looks like I'll live with 60-70w all the time.
Re: Note for the archives: Cpus don't have a 4x multiplier!
Kill-a-watt. Great investment for this kind of stuff!Felger Carbon wrote:Is that the wall-socket power measured by a wattmeter (Power Angel, Kill A Watt), or some other measurement?plympton wrote:Looks like I'll live with 60-70w all the time.
Not sure if it helps, but in order to get an accurate voltage reading on an A8N-VM (and the CSM version) I had to use CPU-Z and edit it's ini to use VCORE=3.
Not sure if that applies to this VM board as well.
By default, using PCPROBE II and other utils they reported higher VCORE voltages that weren't actually being deliverd.
For instance, under load 1.40v woud be listed as 1.46v. Idle 1.10v would be listed as 1.18v.
If your trying to undervolt using the default numbers you end up trying to drive the voltage down below what you think your setting them to.
I've seen some posts in regards to this on other ASUS boards and maybe worth checking out for this one.
If VCORE=3 gives bad numbers, try VCORE=2.
Not sure if that applies to this VM board as well.
By default, using PCPROBE II and other utils they reported higher VCORE voltages that weren't actually being deliverd.
For instance, under load 1.40v woud be listed as 1.46v. Idle 1.10v would be listed as 1.18v.
If your trying to undervolt using the default numbers you end up trying to drive the voltage down below what you think your setting them to.
I've seen some posts in regards to this on other ASUS boards and maybe worth checking out for this one.
If VCORE=3 gives bad numbers, try VCORE=2.