(02-25-2012, 11:30 AM)NaturalViolence Wrote:Quote:Technically it's not overclocking since all you're doing is forcing it to do what it's supposed to be doing anyway.
No it shouldn't. It MAY reach 2.3 GHz under a light single core workload but if 2 or more cores are active it probably won't. You are overclocking it in the most literal sense of the word.
Doubtful. That would mean I was able to overclock my laptop a full 1GHz with no issues. That would be quite the huge overclock for the laptop to still be running normal. That wouldn't be possible unless this hardware was designed to reach those speeds already.
Asus Laptop: K53TA
OS: Windows 7 Home Premium, 64-Bit - SP1
CPU: AMD Llano A6-3400M, Quad-Core, 1.4GHz-2.6GHz (Overclocked)
GPU: AMD Radeon HD6650M, 1GB GDDR3 (Catalyst 13.1)
RAM: Samsung 4GB DDR3-1333
OS: Windows 7 Home Premium, 64-Bit - SP1
CPU: AMD Llano A6-3400M, Quad-Core, 1.4GHz-2.6GHz (Overclocked)
GPU: AMD Radeon HD6650M, 1GB GDDR3 (Catalyst 13.1)
RAM: Samsung 4GB DDR3-1333