News Headlines
- Wed, May 22
- Call of Duty: Ghosts video compares graphical improvements between Modern Warfare 3 and Ghosts
- Metro: Last Light DLC summer lineup brings serveral content packs, Season Pass also announced
- No self-published indie titles on Xbox One, indie devs must find a publisher first
- Remedy's Sam Lake apologizes to Alan Wake fans, launches Humble Bundle and Xbox LIVE sale
- Company of Heroes 2 cinematic tells the story of war from a soldier's perspective, previews the campaign
New Articles
Related Articles
Overclocking was dead simple on the ECS HDC-I, as the only option available to users to tweak is a predefined Turbo Mode. That means it was also a boring experience. Normally we would be disappointed with such a limited BIOS, but this time it is tough to do so, as the overclock achieved through Turbo Mode is a hefty 33%. That's right; the E-350 can clock in at 2133MHz. The memory multiplier obviously is brought down to 3:8, or else it would have been clocked at almost 1800MHz. The reference clock increases by 2MHz randomly sometimes too, so that's why in the following screenshot the E-350 is actually at 2167MHz.
Update 11/22/11: Neoseeker has learned from a few forum members that the Turbo Mode is not featured on mass production units, supposedly because of stability issues.
It's pretty impressive considering the fact that the Gigabyte board, even in manual mode, did not allow anything higher than 120MHz on the reference clock, from the stock 100MHz.

So for that particular reason, the overclocked scores from the Gigabyte offering as well as those from the Athlon II X2 and Sempron will be compared. It is going to be interesting, as the manual overclocking of the Gigabyte board allowed for a higher memory frequency, but the core clock was much lower.


next
1 2
Now it be fair from the ECS to provide at least a small possibility of overclocking like the other e350 boards! We should send them a suggestion, because many left disappointed!
Now I'm sad, I'm not angry. It will be better :-)
P.S. I believe you, none of you not guilty. Blame the ECS!
Bojan (foster12345)
The article was updated with the information.
My conclusion is that the ECS provides you a stable motherboard with turbo mode bios to test and review. Of course all other sales without a new BIOS and stability. Their main goal is to attract the rest of us and sell us the waste. It is not fair and should be someone to contact them for explanation!
Sorry to disturb Smith, but it's important to me to figure out the exact problem...
I really suggest you run a stability test overnight. VLC might be digging up issues that other programs don't.
Dakky Why are you think so? The board, which does not pass the tests is corrupt, and must not be sold with the same price.
ECS must have an explanation for this!
Dakky, have you tried the Turbo BIOS update?
Sincerely, Bojan (foster12345)
I would be grateful for answers!
I'll send a message to Dakky to make sure he doesn't miss this one.
Stay tuned for more great articles.
Here is the proof:
http://s11.postimage.org/4y6lstyr7/screenshot_4.jpg
p.s. And dakky and will be happy! Should have imagination, and good people like "The Smith"
Thank you once again!
Also, here is a pic of what to expect.
Good luck, let us know how it ends up.
next
1 2