The Great Texas Overclocking Competition
by Wesley Fink on March 9, 2005 12:00 PM EST- Posted in
- Trade Shows
Scenes from TXGF
John Bruno, ATI Engineering, is seen here in the black shirt helping Macci with his rig. John was working hard to keep everyone's Bullhead boards and ATI video cards working under these extreme conditions. He did manage to take a few minutes to turn in one of the highest overclocks that we saw at the show.ATI seemed to be everywhere, from hosting giveaways to emceeing for the OC competition.
OPPainter spent a good deal of time on camera explaining extreme overclocking. Here, he is talking about his current records at FutureMark to an audience who are astounded by the performance numbers that they are hearing and seeing for themselves at the overclocking competition.
Tony Leach of OCZ was in from England to help with the competition. He was usually around furiously rewriting BIOS code for some special needs - and there were plenty of those with this group.
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ZeroEffect - Thursday, March 10, 2005 - link
i'm sure when you are overclocking in those regions success has more to do with how you are cooling that your parts choice.extreme pursuits aren't for everyone, you know?
i enjoy seeing people excell in what they're interested in, regardless.
woodchuk - Thursday, March 10, 2005 - link
Someone should write a book on overclocking which would be available in the local library, and O/C should be taught in computer classes. I'm dead serious, nothing, but nothing teaches you how these things work any better.SDA - Thursday, March 10, 2005 - link
I mean no offense to anyone who took part in this, but I AM curious: how, exactly, do you have an overclocking competition? Overclocking success is really just luck and part choice... there isn't a whole lot of skill or knowledge involved. Once you get above a certain level, you're about as good as you can be.I guess it's more of an excuse to display new products and have some fun than anything else... no harm in that, certainly. I will say that the last paragraph of the article made me laugh, though. Really, come on.
In other words: what #18 said.
xsilver - Thursday, March 10, 2005 - link
"But just watching these extreme overclockers work gave all of us attending a lot of insight into ways to push our own systems a little further. Most of our readers are more like stock car drivers, but that doesn’t mean that we can’t learn something from those who push the envelope to the very edge. ".....yeah, write this and dont bother to share some tips with us.... its not like we dont want to know
personally i think getting a kickass core from amd/intel will be the decisive factor; its not like you can give your rig more love to make it go faster :P
MadAd - Wednesday, March 9, 2005 - link
Awesome, simply awesome.I still wonder why noone cools the back of the boards too? Surely that tiny extra backcooling would help? its not as if its going to take a lot more equipment?
Kccdx2 - Wednesday, March 9, 2005 - link
15, read OPP's post?? Its number 9 incase you were still haven't read the comments.dm - Wednesday, March 9, 2005 - link
who won...ShadowVlican - Wednesday, March 9, 2005 - link
wow..... wish i was there.... must've been an amazing experience seeing the world's top OCers there in one place!!!RockHydra11 - Wednesday, March 9, 2005 - link
OPP, word of advice. Stay away from the Forum Boards. You'll get flamed the instant you say something someone disagrees with. It doesn't matter who you are. :POh. By the way. What you guys do is incredible. I have a question for you guys though. Are you and Fugger and Macci friends and share info you find and stuff?
ajmiles - Wednesday, March 9, 2005 - link
#11 OPP,lol, ask him for any tips? What did he do that you guys didn't, how strange the people they invited didn't do as well of ATI tech guys. Good job all the same, come to England next time eh!