ASUS Secretly Overclocking Motherboards? 229
Hubert writes "It seems that the motherboard manufacturing industry is getting a little bit too competitive now that ASUS and many other manufacturers are secretly tweaking and overclocking the motherboard in default BIOS settings." A front side bus that's a mere 2 MHz faster may not seem like much of a tweak, but it's just enough to gain an edge over the competition.
As long as it's stable (Score:3, Insightful)
Best...Moderation...Yet.... (Score:2)
Re:Best...Moderation...Yet.... (Score:2)
Re:Best...Moderation...Yet.... (Score:2)
Who meta-moderates the meta-moderators?
Re:As long as it's stable (Score:2)
Re:As long as it's stable (Score:3, Insightful)
FWIW, I have 3 ASUS motherboards at home working right now - A7M266, A7V600, A7V600-X. I've also recommended ASUS boards to friends.
However, I've had more than one case where things being run just slightly out of spec caused instability. For example, a stick of PC2700 RAM. Should work fine in a 333MHZ FSB board - that's what it's designed for. Unfortunately, it turns out this particular stick is *very* close to spec - it runs fine at 333MHz, and starts getting intermi
Re:As long as it's stable (Score:3)
Sweet (Score:5, Funny)
Quote of the day (Score:5, Funny)
Article? (Score:3, Funny)
Re:Article? (Score:5, Informative)
It's a horribly designed web site. Here are the links:
http://www.rojakpot.com/default.aspx?location=3&v
http://www.rojakpot.com/default.aspx?location=3&v
http://www.rojakpot.com/default.aspx?location=3&v
Re:Article? (Score:2)
For a definition, see:
http://hardware.slashdot.org/comments.pl?sid=1595
Re:1996 called (Score:3, Funny)
1957 called and wants their genetic material back.
Re:Article? (Score:4, Informative)
As you can see, a Rojak is a messy mix of many ingredients hastily tossed together. Hence, the word Rojak is also used colloquially (in insult or in jest) to mean something that consists of an odd mix of many different things.
For instance, "James is of Rojak decent" is a crude way of saying James' ancestry is very diverse. Also, "That magazines layout is very rojak" means that the magazines layout is haphazard.
So 'RojakPot' would be a play of words to mean 'MeltingPot'
Oh and... Visit Malaysia
*Rojak, along with Satay, Roti Canai, Teh Tarik, etc are ALL Malaysian dishes, despite what the lying Singaporeans have been claiming.
Re:Article? (Score:2)
What's the definition of overclocking? (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:What's the definition of overclocking? (Score:5, Informative)
Re:What's the definition of overclocking? (Score:2)
Re:What's the definition of overclocking? (Score:5, Informative)
They are running the bus faster than specified, so all PCI devices, the CPU and the memory will run faster than specified. These other compontents are typically from another vendor. This is overclocking, per definition, I'd say.
Re:What's the definition of overclocking? (Score:2)
Nothing but the cpu will be accelerated because for the last good many years, PCI and other bus's on motherboards have had a gated connection to the front side bus (FSB) which means they will run in spec despite overclocking.
Re:What's the definition of overclocking? (Score:5, Informative)
Re:What's the definition of overclocking? (Score:2)
It does kinda matter, but I don't care. If it won't work, I'll just ship it back and buy a new board from another manufacturer who doesn't like to tinker just to win on
Re:What's the definition of overclocking? (Score:2)
Intel tried to not do that with 915/(and I think)925, which did hinder overclocking early on, but most motherboard manufacturers, at least the ones concerned with the overclocking / tweaking market managed to hack their own locks on the PCI ect frequency.
There are still some early K8 chipsets (K8T800 and NF3 150) that don't support locks, but I think that's about it.
Besides
Re:What's the definition of overclocking? (Score:5, Insightful)
Unless the PLL in the motherboard is periodically recalibrated using (for instance) NIST, there's no way in hell that it's ever going to be accurate.
Furthermore, all of these motherboard tests are based on whatever the computer's RTC thinks is reality, but we all know that those drift all over the place. If 1 second != 1 second (and it never does, save for machines properly synchronized to NIST using NTP or somesuch), then the test is meaningless anyway.
Think about the process a bit, and you'll see that there's essentially zero control in the typical PC reviewer's test enviroment (which seems to consist, primarily, of a kitchen table and a digital camera). Components change with time and temperature and voltage, and there's no such thing as a stable consumer-grade clock.
That all being said:
If a part advertised to run at 800MHz actually appears to run at 802MHz, we're talking about an error of only
I mean: If you bought a 200 horsepower car, would you be upset if it only produces 199.50 HP? What if it actually made 200.50 HP?
0.25%
If you complained to Honda, or GM, or somesuch, do you really think you'd be taken seriously?
I mean, geez. For fuck's sake, grow up. It's one-quarter of one percent. Try measuring a "pound" of flour, or a "gallon" of milk, or a "liter" of Pepsi sometime.
("Dear Wal-Mart: I recently purchased from your store a gallon of milk. When I took it home and measured it using my graduated cylinders, I found that it was actually 1.0025 gallons, which is clearly not as advertised. Unless I happened to miss a sign reading "Milk values are specified to a tolerance of +/- 0.25%," I want my money back. Thank you.")
Re:What's the definition of overclocking? (Score:2)
I haven't checked any motherboards, but I think the real time clock usually has its own crystal, independent from the rest of the clocks on the motherboard.
Re:What's the definition of overclocking? (Score:2)
Re:What's the definition of overclocking? (Score:2)
Re:What's the definition of overclocking? (Score:2)
A 1% difference is negligible. No one should base their buying decision on such a small difference. The fact that the ASUS mobo changed the timing from what was specified did make a difference. Any substantial performance improvements that may have been observed in the testing were likely the result of changing the memory timing.
I think most mobo bios's these days normally aut
Re:What's the definition of overclocking? (Score:3, Interesting)
The reason a speedometer is innacurate is so that speeders end up going slower than they actually think they are. It is a road safety "feature." For example, the next time you pass one of those radar signs that show your speed on the highway, try hitting on at 90 or so. If your car is anything like mine, it will probably say somewhere between 80-85 mph. When I blaze by them at 80, it usually says 75. For a long time I thought maybe they were not calibrated, but I have reali
Reference Clock (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:Reference Clock (Score:2)
Re:Reference Clock (Score:2)
Re:Reference Clock (Score:2)
Anyway's, I haven't noticed this on my A64 board, I wonder if it's because of a change in the way those things work for the "speed-steping" or whatever AMD calls it.
Re:Reference Clock (Score:2)
-prator
Re:Reference Clock (Score:2)
So... doesn't sound like a reference clock is the problem to me!
Re:Reference Clock (Score:2, Funny)
You have a little drawer full of 199MHz crystals, or does your crystal oscillator have a knob on it?
Re:Reference Clock (Score:2)
Re:Reference Clock (Score:2)
Re:Reference Clock (Score:2)
Two million is more than a few thousand. We're talking a difference of 2 Mhz compared to a difference of a few kHz here, not absolutes.
Re:Reference Clock (Score:2)
You clearly have no knowledge of what you speak about. A crystal can give a very accurate clock. Also, it is
Warranty (Score:5, Funny)
the reason it's a problem (Score:3, Insightful)
Suppose another motherboard was actually faster than the ASUS, but decided to not overclock. If it had overclocked like ASUS, it would have outperformed the ASUS motherboard (hypothetically speaking).
I don't think the situation is bad now, but it could end up like video cards (Nvidia vs Ati and driver optimizations). The result is that benchmarking will no longer be useful because the comparison is between an apple and orange.
Performance difference exaggerations (Score:5, Insightful)
People need to learn to read graphs. "Best" is too often judged on speed, to the exclusion of other important factors. And too often, performance graphs in magazines and articles are drawn to exaggerate the differences between the worst-performer and the best performer, when the actual performance difference may be 1% or 2%. In terms of PC performance, neglibible.
But a 2% performance improvement may make the difference between a component or system being labelled as "disappointing" and "out in front" by a lot of dumbed-down magazines and online articles.
If only people were better able to keep a sense or proportion, and view performance tests with a little more intelligence, manufacturers wouldn't be so tempted to pull silly stunts like this one.
Re:Performance difference exaggerations (Score:2)
Unless one's in some race where second-place equals also-ran, most computer users would gladly give up a little performance to get a machine that never errs. (And that is the curve-behavior in the "overclocking" re
Re:Performance difference exaggerations (Score:2)
That's one reason I don't frequent "hardware review" sites anymore. Another reason is that they don't show the origin, to show that 1% doesn't make a noticible of difference.
That and the fact that only 25% of the average page they send is actual content, the remaining 75% is split between ads and an excessive menu s
If it makes it unstable.... (Score:2)
Re:If it makes it unstable.... (Score:2)
then the product is not of merchantable quality and you can sue their ass off. If the system's still stable, then what's the problem?
I am not familiar with the American Legal system , but here in England there are substantial costs involved in a civil case(unless you go to a small claims court).Would it make sense to go to court over a few hundred quid?
Re:If it makes it unstable.... (Score:2)
*snicker*
Meh (Score:2)
Hell, my own A8N-SLI Deluxe varies vetween 1995 and 2015 MHz while set to 200x10.
A8N-E (Score:2)
Geez (Score:2, Informative)
Re:Geez (Score:3, Interesting)
Waranty issues (Score:2)
And the fact that this is done out of the box and without the user's knowledge, yes, its a bad thing.
This isn't even news (Score:3, Interesting)
I haven't read any recent articles, but I don't see why they would stop mentioning it.
It's not new, it's been this way for years and then they get that juicy 2% difference in performance.
It's presumably marketing led, but important? (Score:5, Interesting)
Er, no. It scales. It's still only 1% of the reference clock speed,assuming we have a 3GHz or above CPU, and any CPU manufacturer that tried to release CPUs that were exactly marginal on stability at the designated clock frequency would soon be out of business.
My own usual experience, back in hardware days, was that a lot of old boards were badly designed and had out of spec built in delays, but that the tolerances built in to the main components allowed them to keep going regardless. This was as true in the days when EPROM had a claimed access time of 450nS but the board only gave it 400 from address and chip select going stable, to this case where the deviation is quite small.
To be really tedious, I'm going to point out that the defined frequencies are not what really matters. What matters is the access time, the time between the input parameters going stable (i.e. address, chip selects etc. staying below the zero threshold or above the 1 threshold) and the actual point at which data is either read from or latched into a register. This is governed by four main factors - chip to chip variation, clock frequency, supply voltage at the chip, and die temperature, and that is as true for latches and registers as well as for memory and processors.
Therefore, if manufacturer A is confident that all the system delays on his motherboard are consistently within the maximum safe values by a determined amount, he may perfectly well be able to drive the clock speed a little higher than manufacturer B, whose process variations are greater or who has a less well designed board. The actual time available to the bought in components to write or read data may be greater than on manufacturer B's board, despite the higher clock speed.
Personally I do not go in for overclocking- I work for a company that now standardises on AMD64 boxes and, for our work, performance is no longer a real issue - but there is nothing in principle wrong with it. It's just like auto making, where some manufacturers release models using the same engine but slightly different torque curves and outputs, for whatever reason. They don't change the water pump and the gas pump just because one model is rated at 98BHP in one market and, because perhaps of slight variations in fuel quality, 100BHP in another market.
Bad testing methodology (Score:5, Informative)
* He's measuring using software. The error margin of software methods to measure this kind of thing dwarf 2% and head into the 6% range; typically more so with voltage measurement, which motherboards tend to measure about 0.1V lower than they really are; but for this kind of thing, we should demand testing with a correctly calibrated and maintained hardware frequency counter. I don't think CPU-Z qualifies to measure a change that small reliably.
* This is normal, and within expected tolerances; it's only running a bit high because the natural wandering of his motherboard's PLLs is a little high, and it's only 33MHz above because it's being rounded up when locked.
* Each individual motherboard will have a slightly different clock. Some vary WAY more than this. And only one motherboard of each model tested. That isn't statistically significant, particularly as this is an issue which will vary from individual motherboard to motherboard, as it relies on the tolerances of the clocks. He needs to take a lot more samples; over 100 really; and graph a bell curve from that.
* Also - only one control?
Furthermore, I think this reviewer simply doesn't understand the default settings of the motherboard. He's letting it select sensible defaults, then complaining they're not as sensible as he'd like. He's complaining that his particular motherboard is a little bit out on manual settings, but really if he's that concerned about such a small change, why isn't he testing using hardware?
I think the memory timings can be put down to ASUS's "AI". This is a motherboard feature... and it can be disabled. ASUS's concept "Normal" or "Slower" is a very small push, but if he wants to run truly at stock like a paranoid, use "Disabled", Manual timings on memory, and lock the PCI speed to 33MHz. That goes particularly for the PEG Link Mode. This is normal and expected behaviour for an ASUS (and everyone else).
However, the fractional overclock is actually well within what would be considered normal tolerance. 6% at worst, and that's only on the PCI bus if you didn't lock the PCI bus clock (but in fact it _does_ lock the PCI bus clock, he just didn't measure that bus).
If this caused any problems with system components, the components would not be binned at this level, as for example CPUs are required to pass all self tests at over 10% over a given bin speed to actually make the bin (to reduce returns and DOA); less than that and they will go into the lower bin, because there's a question mark about their ability to perform consistently at stock.
So yeah, his motherboard might be (according to software) running a trifle high; but only 1.1%-1.2% high. Woo, his motherboard's within normal tolerances. Whole lot o' nothing, from a guy who just wants blog traffic.
Re:Bad testing methodology (Score:2)
Clueless! The output frequency from a PLL is determined by the input frequency (precise to better than 0.01%) and counters in the PLL (absolutely accurate). Any deviation in the output frequency is very short term and is called jitter. Although there is a place internal to the PLL where the frequency is controlled by a voltage, that place is inside the loop and does not affect frequency measurements.
they've been doing this for a while (Score:3, Insightful)
i always just thought it was just that the timing crystals/chips they were using were cheap and inaccurate, but i guess not. or maybe this is just the old "never attribute to malice what can be easily attributed to lazyness"
Well, the answer seems obvious... (Score:2)
really old news (Score:2)
I thought this was well-known (Score:2)
This was not a case of crystal timing being off, either; many, many people had similar settings and it was agreed that this was Asus "Wink, Wink, Nudge, Nudge" marketing system.
You know for sure, Intel mothterboards won't.... (Score:2)
The conservative choice.
Slippery slope (Score:2)
I think the issue here isn't whether 2MHz is significant per se, but that it forces everyone to start to drift further and further away from the rated speed. Eventually this process is going to result in distortions that *do* matter.
Couldn't find the content (Score:2)
everyone doing it? no (Score:2)
ASUS on the other hand is being sneaky. You set speed settings to "Auto" or "Normal" and you get overclocked anyways. The only way to turn off the overclocking is "Slow."
As the article noted, this is primarily for synthetic Benchmark cheating.
Stupidity alert (Score:4, Insightful)
It is completely normal to have an oscilator labeled as 200MHz (e.g. driving FSB) which has real frequency (measured) of e.g. 199.8MHz or 202MHz. That is all in tolerance, because - surprise - the exact frequency doesn't really matter for this application. What matters is stability of the frequency, that's why a crystal oscillator is used in the first place. The frequency has to be in the range permitted by the chip maker's spec and you have to be careful if you need to divide the clock somewhere to have integral ratios, but whether it is a bit higher or lower makes really no difference.
So all this brouhaha is bull - the difference between the set 201MHz and real 203MHz could very well be just that that the machine cannot set arbitrary frequency (hint - integral frequency division ..) so it sets it to the nearest integral value possible.
Of course, an evil conspiracy by ASUS is an easier explanation instead of using your own brain.
Re:Stupidity alert (Score:2, Informative)
Notice that it is a 33.3333MHz crystal. This implies an accuracy of around 0.00005 MHz and is fairly typical of crystal oscillators. You can also buy a 33.3330MHz (not 33.333Mhz, but actually 33.3330MHz) one from DigiKey. Seriously, they sell them that close together.
Re: (Score:2)
Crystal Accuracy (Score:2)
Riase your hand if your ASUS has fried ::HAND:: (Score:2)
Remember that time and place when you could tell people who didn't know how to use a computer "A computer is just a stupid person who does EXACTLY what you tell them" ???
Now it seems they are doing things without us... well the companies that make them...
**glares at his mobo.... (mofo) **
Not news (Score:2)
The Pii died -
Stop messing with Mhz, build a better PC already! (Score:2, Interesting)
Via has been doing it to some extent with Mini-ITX, iWill did some interesting stuff with the dual opteron ZMAXdp... I challenge ASUS to come up with a s
Re:So what? (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:So what? (Score:5, Interesting)
And this would have nearly zero effect on your FPS in a game box. What this does is push the motherboard ever so slightly ahead in the benchmark wars, making it look like Asus is building top notch boards that just seem to keep edging out the competition some how.
I seriously hope you run some insane computer / OS like a realtime QNX or some other super hardcore / stable platform that they use to run nuclear reactors and medical devices with, because if you don't... you should be MUCH more worried about the random crashes coming from the combination of cheap hardware / bloated operating system than of the 2 MHz overclocked CPU or front side bus.
Has anyone put any thought into the idea that maybe they tested their configuration really well, and they found no problems what-so-ever. It's not like we're talking about ECS or some crap board manufacturer. ASUS generally makes quality stuff... if anyone should be overclocking by default, it's them!
Re:So what? (Score:4, Insightful)
In case anyone is curious, I first thought it was a cable problem and tried 5 different sata cables from different vendors on that channel. I did full tests on the drive with every program that would run. (spinrite would not run on that system) It has an AMD Sempron 2300+, Corsair value select PC2700 256mb chip, 2 western digital first generation SATA drives 80gb 7200 rpm 8mb cache (identical).
Of course, i've tried playing with overclocking a little because I wanted to prove it was the overclocking. The corruption starts at about 2% overclocked. 1% doesn't do much at all. It could be the cheap processor or ram too. If thats so, I hope asus customers always overbuy on memory and cpus.
As for asus, i used to think they were great. Then I tried to run freebsd 5.x on an asus motherboard. I want ACPI support from my motherboard vendors. Asus doesn't feel they need to finish their ACPI support in their bioses but sadly MSI does.
Re:So what? (Score:2)
Re:So what? (Score:4, Informative)
Besides that little contradiction, there's the issue of temperature fluctuations in a typical household being discussed right before the concept of 60Hz hum in a server room. Server rooms are not temperatue controlled like Jim Bob's trailer home - they're generally pretty tightly regulated to always be below the point where temperature fluctuations make a difference. Take it fromsomeone who works in a jacket half the time.
The idea of 60Hz hum causing instability in a modern computer system is just silly. For some reading that might be useful, do a google search for "faraday cage", then try to draw a parallel between that concept and the big grounded metal box around a computer, and the smaller grounded metal box around the power supply. Then do some reading on power system design in the context of corporate server rooms, and maybe some reading on emissions from two and three phase wiring. The problem is dealt with.
The chips that are being overclocked are being run outside of their specified range. Period. That negates any guarantee of stability that the manufacturer makes. 2MHz or 20 MHz, it doesn't matter - it's out of spec and isn't guaranteed to work right. Sure, it "might" work alright "most" of the time, and it "might" have worked fine for Joe User with one machine running Windows - which crashes randomly anyway.
But the thing is, Joe User doesn't spend millinons of dollars in testing to see how fast their stuff can run. My employer - a major chip manufacturer - does, as do the other major chip manufacturers. I guarantee you, if our chips were 100% reliable every time at a few MHz faster, we'd market them that way. Being faster than "the other guy" is rather important to us.
BTW, ASUS stuff *is* cheap hardware. There's a whole world outside of "stuff you can purchase at Best Buy".
Re:So what? (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:So what? (Score:2)
This is a question of ethics. Lying is never acceptable.
If this is verified, I will never buy from ASUS. (Score:2)
If this is verified, I will never buy from ASUS again. Before I thought they were a vendor of quality motherboards.
--
Bush lied, many died [iraqbodycount.net].
Re:If this is verified, I will never buy from ASUS (Score:2)
And, IIRC, they were upfront about it and would extend warrenty coverage to any part on the motherboard that was damaged by their overclock...
If they ever lied, it was at most not stressing that fact in their marketing. But I think their phone support/sales told me that when I was researching it.
Of course, if your research is
Re:So what? (Score:4, Insightful)
Most websites that review motherboards do it in batches, where they'll do like 10 new motherboards with whatever the new gotta have it feature is. Maybe its a new north bridge chipset, maybe its SATA (back when that was new), something like that.
The thing is though, they post multiple synthetic tests (e.g. 3DMark and PC Mark 2001) and all the results posted are the motherboards at "stock " speeds, they haven't modified them. YOU may modify them, and they will perform better, but they're trying to show you a level playing field of all the boards they're reviewing so you can compare. If one of those boards is actually overclocked (albeit 2 Mhz ain't much) and the others are at stock, it makes that board appear to have a HUGE advatange when its stock speed may not be as good as the others. So yeah...its a big deal.
Re:So what? (Score:5, Interesting)
Big deal? No way is a 1% difference a big deal.
Re:So what? (Score:2)
Nor do our politicians and judges, who apparently think that a 0.001% edge is enough to decide a vote, when the margin of error due to the voting method is much higher than that. Clueless, all of them.
Re:So what? (Score:3, Interesting)
If you have some magic way of translating one person's vote into one counted vote, I'd love to hear it.
I'm not talking about polling a sample. I'm talking about how every single voting method (except, perhaps, for an ideal computer voting system) produces a certain percentage invalid ballots.
Re:So what? (Score:2)
Re:So what? (Score:3, Insightful)
These sites review boards from different companies with the same chip sets. They are all going to come out almost the same! Between innumerate reviewers and innumerate readers, a lot of people come away thinking there is a real difference in the performance of these boards.
A 1% improvement looks like a reason to buy. (Score:2)
Other people who responded to your post seem not to have understood it.
Motherboard speeds vary by a small amount. So, the testers cut off the bottom of the graph bars. That makes a 1% improvement look like a reason to buy one motherboard over the other. It makes a 1% improvement on one look as though the others are slow for some reason. People think, Why? Maybe other things will be slow, as well.
--
If you support dishonesty and violence [doonesbury.com], don't say you are Christian.
Re:So what? (Score:2)
Re:So what? (Score:5, Insightful)
What are you, a CEO of some big company?
Why yes it's bad, unethical and likely illegal.
It is bad for various reasons, one of the biggest being that you have a market leader effectively performing unqualified tweaks on the timing of various system board components. I'm fairly certain that Asus isn't doing any chip qualification tests on the components they are overclocking.
It's unethical because they are doing that to receive an unfair advantage in the highly competitive (and extremely bogus) MB performance rankings. MBs differ in performance by extremely small amounts, so a 2MHz difference is plenty to differentiate one board from another (and again, I'm not saying that this has any noticable impact on the performance of your system, other than a 1% increase in some dumb benchmark).
It's likely illegal because when Asus says it has a 400MHz system bus they are not telling the truth. That would be false advertising (I mean heck, the number is written right on the MB boxes).
But the REAL point here that is MOST disturbing is that the poster doesn't think any of this is even worth posting. THAT'S what I find most appalling. Since when is lying to gain a competitive advantage OK? It is NEVER OK.
Re:So what? (Score:2)
I'd disagree here - the consumer of the board is getting a "better" product that has a higher spec than what is on the box. If it was illegal, wouldn't Intel be in trouble for selling slightly out of spec high end chips as slower clock speed chips as they've been doing for years?
Re:So what? (Score:3, Insightful)
Though I hate car analogies, perhaps this tie one might be appropriate. Consider a car where the speedo was deliberately calibrated to show it going 2% faster than reality. This car will have a lower 0-60 mph time in benchmark tests (probably they don't trust the car speedo in reality, ignore this...). The car isn't better, it just appears to be. And the mobo isn't better; it's misre
Re:So what? (Score:2)
Re:So what? (Score:2)
Re:So what? (Score:3, Informative)
Then, don't forget - http://support.microsoft.com/kb/q140365/ [microsoft.com] the cluster overhead and some format overhead for the duplicate MFT etc...
Re:So what? (Score:2)
Re:ABI AV8 (Score:2)
This isn't giving anyone an edge on the competition, because people don't buy motherboards with reference to performance, becuase anyone buying their own mobo knows that boards aren't just "inherently faster" for no apparent reason. The changes to performance are so minute that reviews (who probably don't even measure performance differences between boards when looking at motherboards becuase they're so minute) wouldn't even pick up on them, and therefore potential custome
Re:As far as I know... (Score:2)
Re:Whats with the modding going on here...... (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:Computer time (Score:2)
The only time critical application is my wife looking at the time in the morning and freaking out thinking's she's late