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Anyone use this and experiencing any benefits from overvolting. I know its pretty unsafe to overvolt but my phone has trouble staying stable at 1.3ghz for more than 20 minutes and was wondering if overvolting it to 1325mv would help? I just don't feel like spending 2 dollars on an app that might not even help.
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Yes, it would help
xopher.hunter said:
Anyone use this and experiencing any benefits from overvolting. I know its pretty unsafe to overvolt but my phone has trouble staying stable at 1.3ghz for more than 20 minutes and was wondering if overvolting it to 1325mv would help? I just don't feel like spending 2 dollars on an app that might not even help.
Sent from my SPH-D700 using XDA Premium App
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Don't you mean to say Under-volt because Over-volt which isn't possible, would mean giving more voltage to the frequency meaning more juice being sucked, and most likely wouldn't work out in the first place. haha
1.3Ghz should normally be @ 1325mv anyway, so you would want to Under-volt it 50-100mv if you can, i normally have 600-1000Mhz UV'ed by 50mv, 200-400Mhz UV'ed by 75mv & 100Mhz UV'ed by 100mv. I dont even use anything higher anymore seeing how there is no use for it besides saying " Oh hey look my phone can do this or can do that" only purpose is to
benchmark and who cares anymore haha. Its fun every now and again.
XxLostSoulxX said:
Don't you mean to say Under-volt because Over-volt which isn't possible, would mean giving more voltage to the frequency meaning more juice being sucked, and most likely wouldn't work out in the first place. haha
1.3Ghz should normally be @ 1325mv anyway, so you would want to Under-volt it 50-100mv if you can, i normally have 600-1000Mhz UV'ed by 50mv, 200-400Mhz UV'ed by 75mv & 100Mhz UV'ed by 100mv. I dont even use anything higher anymore seeing how there is no use for it besides saying " Oh hey look my phone can do this or can do that" only purpose is to
benchmark and who cares anymore haha. Its fun every now and again.
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Technically, the over clocked frequencies are under volted by default. That is why some phones can't handle the OC - it's the same issue people have with too much UV on the stock frequencies.
Higher frequencies require higher voltages, but the voltages required by over clock frequencies would exceed the maximum voltage rating of the chip. So the developers had to UV those frequencies to avoid exceeding the max voltage - they decided that instability (and recoverable problems that may result) are a safer risk than burning up the chip
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XxLostSoulxX said:
Don't you mean to say Under-volt because Over-volt which isn't possible, would mean giving more voltage to the frequency meaning more juice being sucked, and most likely wouldn't work out in the first place. haha
1.3Ghz should normally be @ 1325mv anyway, so you would want to Under-volt it 50-100mv if you can, i normally have 600-1000Mhz UV'ed by 50mv, 200-400Mhz UV'ed by 75mv & 100Mhz UV'ed by 100mv. I dont even use anything higher anymore seeing how there is no use for it besides saying " Oh hey look my phone can do this or can do that" only purpose is to
benchmark and who cares anymore haha. Its fun every now and again.
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Overvolting is 100% possible.
Did the news get around about a guy named butcher pete?
Yes the app allowed overvolting. I bought it.
Sent From My Evo Killer!
I overvolted 1.3ghz to 1350mv and it has been smooth ever since. I know its gonna waste my battery away but I needz my 1.3 jiggawatts. Not really but its fast lol and helps dungeon defenders not stutter as much.
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styles420 said:
Technically, the over clocked frequencies are under volted by default. That is why some phones can't handle the OC - it's the same issue people have with too much UV on the stock frequencies.
Higher frequencies require higher voltages, but the voltages required by over clock frequencies would exceed the maximum voltage rating of the chip. So the developers had to UV those frequencies to avoid exceeding the max voltage - they decided that instability (and recoverable problems that may result) are a safer risk than burning up the chip
Sent from my SPH-D700 using XDA App
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I'll chime in, you are absolutely correct. XxLostSoulXx, you are definitely wrong: of course it is possible to overvolt. I can see the OP's reasoning and I would say go for it, just be careful and keep in mind that you are already above spec voltages for 1.3ghz.
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I have it too. Just have to know how to take your time with it.
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thomasskull666 said:
I'll chime in, you are absolutely correct. XxLostSoulXx, you are definitely wrong: of course it is possible to overvolt. I can see the OP's reasoning and I would say go for it, just be careful and keep in mind that you are already above spec voltages for 1.3ghz.
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I guess if you say so but i cant OverVolt it only allows me to UVolt.
But if higher frequencies require higher voltages meaning his phone already cant handle why would he give it more voltage on top of it shouldn't he Uvolt to become stable?
XxLostSoulxX said:
I guess if you say so but i cant OverVolt it only allows me to UVolt.
But if higher frequencies require higher voltages meaning his phone already cant handle why would he give it more voltage on top of it shouldn't he Uvolt to become stable?
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The paid version of voltage control? Because the light version doesn't have the overvolt option...
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XxLostSoulxX said:
I guess if you say so but i cant OverVolt it only allows me to UVolt.
But if higher frequencies require higher voltages meaning his phone already cant handle why would he give it more voltage on top of it shouldn't he Uvolt to become stable?
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I think you're misunderstanding a little. Undervolting reduces the voltage it uses. So less power. Higher frequencies require more power to function well. So taking power away would only make the problem worse. Undervolting is ONLY useful for saving battery power. Overvolting would eat your battery, but give more energy to the higher frequency, and level out the stability.
XxLostSoulxX said:
I guess if you say so but i cant OverVolt it only allows me to UVolt.
But if higher frequencies require higher voltages meaning his phone already cant handle why would he give it more voltage on top of it shouldn't he Uvolt to become stable?
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No. He needs more voltage to power the frequencies he can't handle. Why do you think the phone freezes if you UV too much? And Overvolting is more than possible.
theimpaler747 said:
No. He needs more voltage to power the frequencies he can't handle. Why do you think the phone freezes if you UV too much? And Overvolting is more than possible.
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Okay can you give me a screen shot of doing it or a link to the voltage control because i believe i have the latest and i cant theres no option for me to OverVolt when i hit the frequency the bar. its to the right and only can move it to left thus UnderVolting seeing how it says -25,-50 and so on.
Look it up in the market it costs 2 dollars I bought it yesterday
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XxLostSoulxX said:
Okay can you give me a screen shot of doing it or a link to the voltage control because i believe i have the latest and i cant theres no option for me to OverVolt when i hit the frequency the bar. its to the right and only can move it to left thus UnderVolting seeing how it says -25,-50 and so on.
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The free version of voltage control should have advertised over volt as a feature of the paid version
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styles420 said:
The free version of voltage control should have advertised over volt as a feature of the paid version
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+1
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styles420 said:
The free version of voltage control should have advertised over volt as a feature of the paid version
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Im not understanding what you mean by that its advertised over volt as a feature of the paid version?
do you mean to say that in the free version its a feature or there saying in the paid version you have the option?
Tegrak overclock.
Bought it earlier today, got me stable at 1.3 (instead of only 1.2) with an extra 50mv on both core/internal voltages. Awesome. And its TRUELY faster.
Sent from my pocket rocket
XxLostSoulxX said:
Im not understanding what you mean by that its advertised over volt as a feature of the paid version?
do you mean to say that in the free version its a feature or there saying in the paid version you have the option?
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The paid version is called Voltage Control Extreme. It is a paid app. Its an add on to the free Voltage Control. So if you get it and install it, it doesn't show up as another app but it will allow you to overvolt instead of only undervolt. It will help those who can't get 1300 or 1400 stable as long as they don't go overboard with it
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Is the Tegra3 processor a 2core, 3core or 4core and what is the GHZ speed of this Tegra3? I love this new Nexus7 it is totally awesome.
Quad hut actually has 5...I believe it is 1.2ghz stock (could be wrong).
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Just watched a neat nVidia video on the Tegra 3. It has 4-cores and a "companion core". The companion core does all the mundane background stuff and sucks the least juice. The other cores only kick in when needed, like for loading an app quickly, playing a game, etc.
The video was linked in another thread on XDA...just can't remember where.
It's a 5 core chip with a 12 core GPU, clocked at 1.3 ghz.
Sent from my G2x still on GB
GeneralCrocket said:
It's a 5 core chip with a 12 core GPU, clocked at 1.3 ghz.
Sent from my G2x still on GB
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1.5Ghz still recognized as quad core
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XxLostSoulxX said:
1.5Ghz still recognized as quad core
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It's 1.3 ghz with 4 cores + power saving core.
Sent from my G2x still on GB
I second the above^^
I know the current max GPU clock for note is 400mhz
But would it be possible to oc to 500 or 600 like s3
Since its the same identical GPU?
Sent from my Galaxy Nexus using Tapatalk 2
Think that pushing farther won't make any difference...
Enviado desde mi GT-N7000 usando Tapatalk 2
I disagree. I think it will make a difference but if I recall correctly, the one in GS3 is not exactly the same and can run a higher speeds with less heat/voltage. Unless I am totally off on that one.
Should give noticeable performance increase during 3d gaming.
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Did any one notice a chirping sound from the device?
I oc'd to 1.7 GHz , my phone froze- nothing worked and after 10-15 seconds my phone started making sounds.... Got scared... Immediately removed the battery waited for few mins... Immediately restored.a backup !
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That teaches you for ocing it that much!
Although mine was fine at 2ghz when i tested it on beast mode
Sent from my Asus Nexus Unicorn
You sure? On huntervu when o oc"d to 2.0 GHz it worked nearly for a minute before it froze!
What governors would you suggest?? On beastmode
sent from my oc'd incS
yashwantpiduru said:
You sure? On huntervu when o oc"d to 2.0 GHz it worked nearly for a minute before it froze!
What governors would you suggest?? On beastmode
sent from my oc'd incS
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Yes I am sure, mr senior member.
It was 2GHz, ondemand, stock voltages.
If you overclock a lot (past ~1.3GHz) I recommend to not undervolt. Maybe give it a bit more voltage
I suggest ondemand, don't go over 1.2GHz (for battery and life of phone) and undervolt a bit
I never changed any voltages! Just governors and schedulers
sent from my oc'd incS
Maybe your phone has some sort of retardation derived from it's operator?!?
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Might be!!! Lol earlier i was really considering network?
sent from my oc'd incS
Hi everyone,
I use my Raspberry Pi as a web server.
What is the limit of overclock for a 32gb class 10 SD card ?
Thanks
Angristan said:
Hi everyone,
I use my Raspberry Pi as a web server.
What is the limit of overclock for a 32gb class 10 SD card ?
Thanks
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It's recommended to not overclock with the class 10's.
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5ft24 said:
It's recommended to not overclock with the class 10's.
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At all?
Yep
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Why not? What does an fast card have to do with frequency of the processor? What bad things can occur?
khrystyan27 said:
Why not? What does an fast card have to do with frequency of the processor? What bad things can occur?
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Timing is more critical on a class 10 card than the slower cards. Over clocking and you can get hiccups with the timing on read/writes with the card, leading to corruption
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Then what's the highest class that is recommended?
I want to get the maximum out of my Raspberry!
khrystyan27 said:
Then what's the highest class that is recommended?
I want to get the maximum out of my Raspberry!
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I've been using class 4's with good results. My Xbian media center is running 900MHZ and I'm not having issues
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Using Class 10 and overclocked to 1100.
Nypan sr said:
Using Class 10 and overclocked to 1100.
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1100 ?
Mhz.
I'm using OpenElec and USB 3.0 stick,overclocked to 1100Mhz,with no problems...
USB stick as a Storage ext4 partition...
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How do you OC at 1100Mhz ?
I want to know that too... How to overclock to 1100 Mhz, when the maximum is 1000Mhz.
Is 1100Mhz the limit? Does it overheat?
I have Raspbmc installed, you can do a custom overclock.
My settings are:
CPU 1100
Core 450
Image sensor pipe 450
GPU 250
RAM 450
Overvolt 6
With a small (50 mm) fan powered from a usbhub it never gets hotter than 42C.
Hi!
Thank you for your reply. I have a large Alu heatsink on the CPU and smaller heatsink on every chipset of the Raspberry, even on the power MOSFET. On top of the heatsink I have a big 120mm 12V fan, which is working at about 9V to maintain silence.
The CPU has been overclocked to 1000Mhz, and I've never seen temps over 38 degrees on the CPU when the fan is running and 44 when the fan is not running. If I keep the stock frequency I have 28 with fan turned on and 34 without the fan.
Which is the maximum frequency that the Raspberry CPU can take?
khrystyan27 said:
Hi!
Thank you for your reply. I have a large Alu heatsink on the CPU and smaller heatsink on every chipset of the Raspberry, even on the power MOSFET. On top of the heatsink I have a big 120mm 12V fan, which is working at about 9V to maintain silence.
The CPU has been overclocked to 1000Mhz, and I've never seen temps over 38 degrees on the CPU when the fan is running and 44 when the fan is not running. If I keep the stock frequency I have 28 with fan turned on and 34 without the fan.
Which is the maximum frequency that the Raspberry CPU can take?
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1000mhz with warrenty
But how much past 1000Mhz? I don't care about warranty, it's allready expired.
khrystyan27 said:
But how much past 1000Mhz? I don't care about warranty, it's allready expired.
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Over 1ghz you have many chances to destroy your RPi, and I don't know how to do it.
Thank you for your reply @Angristan.
I know the risk, but still... I want to know how much I can go past the stock 1000Mhz. The performance would be great with a Class 10 Card (I will take this risk too).