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Pentium 4 631 Overclocked to 8 GHz

Andreas writes "There are always those who are willing to take things one step further than others. A group of guys known as OC Team Italy is one of them. They recently pushed an Intel Pentium 4 631 to over 8000MHz using an ASUS P5B with modified voltage regulation and liquid nitrogen. Overclocking is cool and all, but this extends beyond what some would perhaps call useful. Still a milestone though."

10 of 271 comments (clear)

  1. direct link to photos of setup by Bananatree3 · · Score: 5, Informative

    To save thoughs who just want to see the setup pictures

  2. Just in Time! by LiquidCoooled · · Score: 5, Funny

    Thats just in time!

    Vista is released in a couple of days, we need at least one machine up to spec.

    --
    liqbase :: faster than paper
    1. Re:Just in Time! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Funny

      *sigh* You and your facts. What do you think this is, Digg?

  3. The problem with high clock is not just heat ... by vlad_petric · · Score: 5, Informative

    It's also how fast your circuits can switch, and how fast the signal can travel on the wires. The execution core of a Pentium 4 also happens to be double-pumped (i.e., it performs operations on both edges of the clock signal). Essentially, those ALUs would be switching at 16GHz ... I, personally, take this with a grain of salt.

    --

    The Raven

  4. Re:The problem with high clock is not just heat .. by ettlz · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Indeed. Light travels just under 2 centimetres in the 16 GHz period. The Pentium 4 core is not much smaller than this... it seems like they're pushing their luck on order-of-magnitude estimates alone.

  5. Re:Why not 8 GHz? by SmlFreshwaterBuffalo · · Score: 5, Funny

    Personally, I would've gone with 8,000,000,000,000,000 nHz.

  6. Re:The problem with high clock is not just heat .. by product+byproduct · · Score: 5, Informative
  7. Re:8GHZ and still not as fast by be-fan · · Score: 5, Informative

    It's about performance, not MHz. Let's use SPECint as the metric. SPECint_rate scales almost perfectly with both clockspeed and core count. A P4 gets about 6.5 SPECint_rate/GHz/core, while a Core 2 gets about 11.5 SPECint_rate/GHz/core. So an 8 GHz P4 would get a score of 51.68, while a 3.4 GHz Core 2 would get 78.2.

    The P4's single-core results would be substantially higher than the Core 2's single-core results, though. Interestingly, it points to what the P4 was originally designed to do: achieve high performance through high clockspeed. If process technology had met Intel's original projections, we'd have 6+ GHz P4s by now that would have been competitive with current Core 2 chips.

    --
    A deep unwavering belief is a sure sign you're missing something...
  8. Re:The problem with high clock is not just heat .. by Tim+C · · Score: 5, Informative

    The speed of light in a vacuum (c) is the absolute maximum speed at which information can travel. It doesn't matter how much you cool the chip or what materials you make it out of, given our current understanding of physics* you can't push anything through it faster than 3*10**8 m/s. That gives you an absolute cannot-be-bettered upper limit for the distance that your signal can move in one cycle.

    (* which might be wrong, but no-one's managed to prove it wrong yet)

    *Light* has nothing to do with it, it's relativity and the *speed* of light in a vacuum that's important.