Submission Details

Rankings and Points

World Record Rank
Not havli's Best Memory Frequency Submission
27.6 Points
Global Team Power Rank
SDR SDRAM  Team Power Rank
7.3 Points

Images

Hardware Details

Processor

Model AMD Athlon XP 1600+ (Palomino) Palomino Cooling Air (Custom) Cores 1,433 MHz (+2.36%)

Memory

n/a

Videocard

n/a

Motherboard

Model ASUS A7V133 Chipset KT133A (VT8363A)

Disk

n/a

Power Supply

n/a

Comments

havli commented on his own score:
10 years ago – CPU-Z detects wrong SDRAM clock on VIA KT133 chipset. CPU-Z states FSB + 33 MHz. 133.5 + 33 = 169.5 However the real mem clock is FSB + PCI (Aida 64 shows this correctly)... In this case the calculation is: PCI = 136.5/3 = 45.5 MHz FSB = 136.5 MHz Mem = 136.5 + 45.5 = 182 MHz
February 16, 2014 at 9:46:28 PM UTC

Right or wrong, all submissions should be done the same way. I'm sorry, but your calculation should not be recognized......at least not in the middle of a competition. Mods should clarify if this is legit or not.

February 16, 2014 at 10:27:02 PM UTC

This "wrong speed" issue only applies to the KT133 chipset (and perhaps few other VIA sdram-based chipsets using other than 1:1 mem:fsb ratio). Intel 440BX, 815 and 845 RAM speed detection works just fine in both CPU-Z and Aida64 (and therefore shows the same value). I am the only one using this platform, so I don't see a problem here. This score is 100% comparable with others. Anyway... only i815 or i845 based MB can score high enough to win this stage. I have neither of them, so I try to score as high as possible with A7V133.

If mods say this score is invalid, then I will remove it and buy some CPU-Z compatible board.

February 16, 2014 at 10:51:51 PM UTC

we all know havli is right)

February 17, 2014 at 5:41:46 AM UTC

Scotty, this is clearly a CPU-Z issue. What CPU-Z represents as FSB+33 is in fact FSB+PCI and while you're on default, it's the same. You know better that these KT133 use sync clocks and overclocking the bus overclocks the PCI bus too.

 

A similar bug you have with dual P2 clocks (though, I do understand that your case didn't affect the total score).

February 17, 2014 at 1:53:11 PM UTC

Antinomy:

Well said, thank you.

 

ludek111:

I am not really sure. I don't have cusl2 at the moment, so I can't test this mem propertly. Last year I tried ECS P4S5A/DX+ and maximum validation was somewhere around 180 MHz as well. However SiS chipset is incompatible even with Aida64. I could only estimate RAM speed by FSB clock and memory divider. This SDRAM module is Infineon 256MB, PC 133 CL2, BX compatible (16 chip). I assume its not that good compared to modern high-density modules. Maybe BGA chips are the best.

February 17, 2014 at 4:37:42 PM UTC

K. If everybody else is good with it, I have no issue. No harm done. Thanks for the response.

February 17, 2014 at 10:47:56 PM UTC

Mr. Scott, there already was such an issue but the other way around - when CPU-Z showed a higher divider whereas a lower was in use. Results were marked as invalid and recalculated despite CPU-Z showing higher numbers. It was a Gigabyte P35 or P45 issue with 1:2 (and 3:5 for real).

 

Just've recalled this one. But too young for memory issues :D

February 17, 2014 at 10:50:45 PM UTC

Mr. Scott, there already was such an issue but the other way around - when CPU-Z showed a higher divider whereas a lower was in use. Results were marked as invalid and recalculated despite CPU-Z showing higher numbers. It was a Gigabyte P35 or P45 issue with 1:2 (and 3:5 for real).

Yes, I know about the 3:5 issue. ;)

February 17, 2014 at 10:57:43 PM UTC

Mr. Scott, there already was such an issue but the other way around - when CPU-Z showed a higher divider whereas a lower was in use. Results were marked as invalid and recalculated despite CPU-Z showing higher numbers. It was a Gigabyte P35 or P45 issue with 1:2 (and 3:5 for real).

 

3:5 divider on 400 strap is bugged on all P35/P45/X38/X48 boards, and it is 2:3 in reality. ;)

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