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AMD Phenom II X6 1100T Black Edition Review – overclocking performance

The review today focuses on the overclocking capability of the AMD Phenom II X6 1110T Black Edition and we will explain our settings as we continually push the 1100T to its limitations.

There is much debate online as to ‘how to overclock the 6 core AMD processor' and while these processors can require a little hand holding at times, the basic methodology is straightforward. I actually find them extremely simple to overclock and they like voltage, as long as you don't get out of control.

Voltage limitations are also a constant topic of conversation and if you google online, you will see many overclocking forums have pages and pages of argument and counter argument as to how far you should really push the silicon.

My own findings may of course vary from other enthusiast users but I can honestly say that I have yet to kill any modern day processor by pushing it too hard. Perhaps I have ‘the luck of the Irish' when overclocking.

So let me state it clearly for anyone reading this. With air cooling, regardless of how hardcore it is, never force more than 1.575 volts through an AMD Phenom II X6 processor. If your cooling is modest, then aim much, much lower. The only air cooler I would use for this level of voltage is the Noctua NH D14. More on this cooler on the next page … but that is my own rule of thumb condensed into a paragraph.

Today we are going to review the processor with a multitude of settings and for each section I will detail the bios settings I used. This, in theory should mean that a quick perusal of settings should be easy for our readers, rather than scrolling down a single page with 5 or 6 sets of detailed bios configurations.

While many reviews will build up to an ‘overclocking' page near the end of the review, as I said earlier, the point of this article is to publish an analysis of the 1100T in various configurations of overclocked states.

So how far did we manage to push the 1100T?

I managed to get it to just over 4.4ghz at 1.6 volts, however from my own experience with AMD processors this could be rather fatal long term and while it would look great on paper, I wouldn't recommend our readers attempt this. Sure. if you are trying to break records with LN2, go for it, but for 24/7 real world use at the heart of an enthusiast system, forget it.

AMD rate the maximum voltage for these processors as 1.4 volts, but this is a very safe rating to ensure that failure rate is not an issue from them. As with all overclocking ventures, I don't want to be held responsible for any fried hardware. I recommend my own settings then show you those settings in action, but there is always a risk with overclocking any hardware, you are after all pushing it beyond manufacturer specification.

Validation is available here

While not many will be wanting to run a 1100T at 4.4ghz, I am confident that even an overclocking novice should be able to get this processor to a reasonable level of overclock, such as 4ghz, or higher. Much depends on your motherboard, choice of cooler, and level of expertise (patience?), but it really isn't such a dark art.

Our review systems of choice are as follows. Special thanks to both Intel and AMD for supplying the hardware.

Intel's Turbo feature at default clock speeds is left enabled.

Main Review system:

Processor: AMD Phenom II X6 1100T Black Edition
Processor: AMD Phenom II X6 1055T
Memory: Kingston HyperX 8GB 1600Mhz Kit
Motherboard: MSI 890GXM-G65 (MS-7642)
Graphics Card: HIS HD6870 Turbo Edition
Power Supply: Thermaltake ToughPower Grand 750W
Chassis: Antec Dark Fleet DF-85
Cooler: Noctua NH D14
Drive: Intel 80GB SSD

Intel Review System 1:
Processor: Intel Core i7 950
Memory: Crucial Ballistix Tracer 6GB 1600mhz
Motherboard: AsRock X58 Extreme6
Graphics Card: AMD HD6850
Power Supply: Thermaltake ToughPower Grand 750W
Chassis: Antec Dark Fleet DF-85
Cooler: Noctua NH D14
Drive: Kingston 128GB SSD

Intel Review System 2:
Processor: Intel Core i7 970
Memory: GSkill 6GB DDR3-2133mhz
Motherboard: MSI X58A-GD65 (MS-7522)
Graphics Cards: Gigabyte GTX460 Sli OC
Power Supply: Corsair AX1200
Chassis: Thermaltake Level 10
Cooler: Coolit Vantage
Drive: OCZ 128GB SSD/Kingston 256GB SSD

Software:
Windows 7 64 bit Enterprise Edition SP1 (fully updated)
FRAPS
PC Mark Vantage
SiSoft Sandra
Cinebench R11.5 64 bit
Cyberlink Media Espresso V6
3D Studio Max 2011

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11 comments

  1. bloody hell, nice overclock man. that is a cracker processor.

  2. Love the cinema4d information, i use an older quad core for rendering a lot and this seems like my next upgrade. price point is better than I thought. I remember the 1090t was 250 when it came out.

  3. Like the idea of a review/OC guide. I never know how the fuck to overclock my chips. the 1055T guide you did helped me alot.

    Id love to say ill get this for my upgrade, but its a bad time of the year, maybe in the new year.

  4. Love it. well done.

  5. Nice overclock. I only managed to get 500mhz out of my 1055T which was pretty poor. Good to get your views on voltage also, not many ocing guidelines on that and hard to know from forums who is talking out of their ass and who is right.

  6. OCUK are selling this for £225 inc vat? thats a deal and a half, just ordered one.

  7. Ive been holding off on a new platform for ages. Im a multiple core fan, I bought the first core quad eons ago and havent upgraded since. Might look into this in the new year when I have some spare cash to burn.

  8. I agree this is one of the best looking AMD chips yet, the overclocking potential seems high. that noctua NH D14 cooler is insane however, covers the motherboard basically !! not exactly easy to work around it.

  9. unusual review style, but I like the overclocking guide concept. My friend used the 1055T guide here months ago and it helped him. headroom seems higher on this chip, but I think it might be a hand picked review sample? possible ?

  10. If you arent overclocking then its not worth the premium over the 1090t. pointless really. I hope this review sample is a good indication of headroom. I watercool and I got the 1090T to 4.3ghz easy enough with 1.65 volts. potential for 4.5ghz here.

  11. I like this editorial. its a boring release so getting the max from air cooling is a nice way to differentiate the test results. Seems to be a good purchase, but its hard to fault for the price. its a strength of AMD’s releases in the last year. aim for the lowest point possible and max the cores.