Asus Rog Rampage Iv Black Edition Release Date

 
Asus Rog Rampage Iv Black Edition Release Date 4,9/5 835 reviews
  1. Asus Rampage Iv Drivers
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  3. Black Edition Mercedes
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Asus Rampage Iv Drivers

ASUS Rampage IV Black Edition In The BoxOne of the big plus points of expensive motherboards is usually the in-box contents. The appeal of the Rampage IV Black Edition will be the OC Panel, as mentioned earlier in the review. To add to this, ASUS also want to push the ROG Black Edition branding, hence the black SATA cables, the black rear IO plate, the black WiFi antenna and so on.In the box, we get:ManualDriver DiskRear IO ShieldOC Panel + CableOC Panel Front ConverterWiFi AntennaROG Connect CableTen SATA CablesQ-ConnectX-SocketAllen Key2x/3x/4x SLI BridgesFor any box, that is quite a haul: the OC Panel bulks it out a bit, but we also get a full complement of SATA cables and SLI bridges, along with staples of the ROG platform such as the ROG Connect. The WiFi antenna is the new design we saw in the Maximus VI Impact.ASUS Rampage IV Black Edition OverclockingExperience with ASUS Rampage IV Black EditionASUS work heavily on the DIP4 automatic overclocking in the operating system, where previously we either had options to select the overclock speed (e.g.

4.1 GHz, 4.3 GHz, and 4.5 GHz) or a Fast/Extreme overclock. However it does leave a little to the imagination – on our test CPU it did not push it that far. Even in the BIOS, the range of OC options (aside from the extreme settings for liquid nitrogen overclockers) is limited at Gamer’s Air and Gamer’s Water OC. Personally I would prefer a list of MHz overclocks to select from – it might come across that ASUS is reducing the number of options of automatic overclocks but increasing the options for manual overclocking.

I want plenty of automatic overclock options too!Methodology:Our standard overclocking methodology is as follows. We select the automatic overclock options and test for stability with PovRay and OCCT to simulate high-end workloads. These stability tests aim to catch any immediate causes for memory or CPU errors.For manual overclocks, based on the information gathered from previous testing, starts off at a nominal voltage and CPU multiplier, and the multiplier is increased until the stability tests are failed. The CPU voltage is increased gradually until the stability tests are passed, and the process repeated until the motherboard reduces the multiplier automatically (due to safety protocol) or the CPU temperature reaches a stupidly high level (100ºC+). Our test bed is not in a case, which should push overclocks higher with fresher (cooler) air.Automatic Overclock:In the operating system, our sole automatic overclocking option is the Dual Intelligent Processors 4 option in AI Suite:Using this option the system was set at 4.1 GHz for all cores, a relatively small 100 MHz boost over standard settings (where MultiCore Turbo is enabled for 4.0 GHz on all cores). The system was set to 1.250 volts on the CPU, which read as 1.264 volts during OCCT load.

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This setting scored 2203.54 in PovRay (compared to 2132.22 with no overclock) and a peak OCCT temperature of 59C.In the BIOS, we actually get several automatic overclock options – two of them are clearly marked at the top, but the other three are found in the ‘CPU Level Up’ option, from 4.1 GHz to 4.3 GHz and 4.5 GHz. This might mean that the DIP4 BIOS setting actually only activates the CPU Level Up 4.1 GHz setting – in fact the similar voltage and CPU performance results would indicate this is the case.

The results for the BIOS settings are as follows:The Gamer’s Air/Water settings were very aggressive on the voltage – 1.500 volts and 1.550 volts respectively. Shade 3d ver 14 keygen crack. Getting 83C for peak OCCT load while on the Air setting and using a closed-loop liquid cooler is extremely aggressive by ASUS. All three CPU Level Up options worked on our CPU sample, which struggles beyond 4.5 GHz on all cores.Manual Overclock:Using the automatic overclock options as a guide, we start manual OC testing at 4.0 GHz on all cores with a CPU voltage of 1.100 volts, combined with a load-line calibration setting of Ultra-High to ensure limited voltage drop across the CPU. The results are as follows:Using the OC Panel allowed me to adjust more of this on the fly – in fact our CPU reached a comfortable 190 MHz on the BCLK using the OC Panel, putting it at the time #6 in the HWBot league for X79 BCLK frequencies. Sunday, January 5, 2014 - For the manual OC I only adjust the voltage, CPU multiplier and the CPU load line calibration, which is pretty much what most users will do when manually overclocking unless told otherwise (or there's another setting you must adjust). It's clear the Auto-OC does a bit more under the hood (VCCSA/VSSIO voltages most likely) - at the expense of a higher voltage (to catch more processors).

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In my test, I also only focus on all cores the same speed, and the stress test attacks all cores, rather than single cores that might be higher turboed. There is scope to go playing around with all the settings, which is what the ROG forums are there to do for users who have only one motherboard every couple of years to organise:).