We head to Berlin to check out the European round of Asus' Advanced Overclocking Championships where overclockers used LN2 to try and break 3DMark06 records
To cool a CPU with liquid nitrogen, you need to hold the
freezing liquid in a metal container known as a ‘pot’ and top it up when needed
as it boils off. Many different pots were used, the most sought after ones being
made by a well known enthusiast called ‘kingpin.’ He supplies relatively small
solid copper pots which are easy to work with as they have a small section at
the bottom with holes which prevents the liquid nitrogen from boiling off too
quickly. This gives you more time for tweaking and also allows you to maintain
a more constant temperature.
WHAT CAN WE DO WITH 1,000 LITRES OF LN2?
It wasn’t long before the first LN2 was poured with the
trademark cloud of white steam rushing along the floor from the container. 1,000
litres were delivered for the event which proved to be more than enough.
Unfortunately the UK team were hit by three early setbacks. Firstly they lost power while the German team were up and running meaning they lost valuable tweaking time. Then they
found that their Vista installation had left them with a German version of the
operating system and no-one could change the language to English. This made
driver tweaking and installation very difficult indeed. Lastly they found their QX9770 had a cold bug. This
didn’t mean it had a case of the sniffles, rather that below a certain
temperature, the PC locked up. The cold bug kicked in at -125’C so Paul and
David had to carefully keep the CPU temperature above this. Occasionally,
over-zealous pouring of LN2 meant Paul had to use an industrial heater to warm
the pot up so the PC would actually boot.
Scores
in 3DMark quickly passed 30,000 but then all competitors appeared to hit a
brick wall. No matter how much voltage teams put through their CPUs (1.9v being
quite common) many found that clockspeeds of 4.8GHz were their limit. Tweaking
and testing went on for the next few hours with teams feverishly trying new
motherboards to see if they could squeeze more out of the CPU. Issues with CrossFire
also hampered progress.
FINAL RESULTS
In
the end, the Germany and UK teams could only manage circa 28,000 points by
using one HD 4870 X2, as two would cause 3DMark to hang. When time was called after
6 hours of solid overclocking, the Swedish team were victorious having scored
31,976 with two HD4870X2’s and a 5.2GHz QX9770, with the Poles in second with 31,962
and Spanish in third with 31,217.
Be sure to check out our images from the day's action by clicking on the pics at the bottom of the page.
wait for the massive influx of "crazy but cool" gear on ebay!
It was a great 2 days and i would have wished for a better score but it wasnt to be. I really did believe we had a chance of winning or finishing in top 3. A lot is down to luck on hardware you get given and how well it overclocks. Also thanks to CPC for sending Antony to the event. Without a doubt one of the most professional reporters i have ever known. Was a great help for myself and Paul "Sacha35". CPC has hit gold having him writing for the mag. :D Anyway i must unpack. :D
I'm sure we saw here a few weeks ago someone beating the record with a nforce 790 Board, Intel Quad Extreme and 3-way SLi using 3 X GTX 280. The quad crossfire must have had a few issues for no one to beat it.
totally agree, there's a reason Asus didn't provide Nvidia cards. That looks like a hell of a lot of fun though.
Oopsies. Now I see how people manage to put the same post twice so often. Sry
Yeah, i can really see crossfire being a massive issue in this. I mean, the fact that 3DMark gets more of a boost from Crossfire than from SLI, and that the 4870X2's are massively faster than any nVidia offering really does put the ATI system at a massive disadvantage. Come on, when you're overclocking to around 5GHz and pouring LN2 all over the shop do you really expect everything to go perfectly? You may as well say they were let down by Intel's 'rubbish' CPUs not going past 4.8GHz.
see even as a competitive medium it's rubbish teams were probably wishing for an SLI alternative at this point
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