Any good stress testing program will show weaknesses  in your overclock you
just have to know what to look for, for instance 3D Mark will often get
graphical artifacts if it is running on a unstable overclock but as
FrozenLord said super prime will do the same thing. When you are
overclocking always remeber to crawl before you walk to say as such, take
tiny steps instead of huge 200Mhz jumps, I would suggest raising it anywhere
between 10Mhz to 50Mhz but no higher otherwise you risk damaging the Netbook
and even yourself (I've seen some computers catch on fire from insane
overclocks, this is rare though), just be cautious. I wouldn't use a
recommended overclock if I were you because so many different factors come
into play that it is impossible to predict what your pc might do that
somebody elses won't.

THEfog

On 24/06/2010 8:09 PM, "FrozenLord" <[email protected]>
wrote:

First off, I don't have a netbook and therefore can't test it.
However, whenever you're overclocking, you have to find the maximum
stable clock for yourself (because of a lot of factors involved which
you can't determine for sure).
So I'd recommend to just experiment a bit.
Overclock it and run a stress test (SuperPrime?) on it. If it runs
fine for let's say 10 minutes, go on overclocking.
As soon as you're happy, have the program test it for 1 hour straight
(or even more) - if it doesn't crash or give you error messages,
you're fine.


On Jun 24, 11:22 am, Philo <[email protected]> wrote:
> Hey guys a quick question, I don't thi...

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