Quote: my cpu goes to 65°C! (but therefore my system is ordinary silent
)and it's still stable @ 80°C (evently this only appears on die-hard o/c)! don't worry about this temperature, as the palomino has an internal temperatur diode which reflects it very exactly & you know, palominos are known to be stable up to 90°C.
Internal diode? I don't know anything about this, the only diode I know of is the one placed under the CPU, inside the square area of the socket. At stock speed, my Palomino runs at about 30C (about room temp in my house). It's got a gigantic aluminum CoolerMaster heat sink, which I imagine helps, but the shitty little 60mm fan on the top doesn't really.
EDIT: It used to run at 30C, before I messed up the thermal pad and replaced it with Radio Shack compound. Now at stock speed it's at 42C.
Quote:but that's the point why increasing the fsb worries me --> i don't want to try the hard way
Every CPU is different. Depending on the week, the design (core), the temp at the plant at the time of manufacture, and the condition of the silicon used, each individual CPU will have different limitations, even under the same cooling and everything.
Quote:2nd point is the pci/agp clock: i don't want to crash my soundcard or my gfx this way
I personally have never had an issue with sound or video, although my old Netgear NIC caused some problems while overclocked, so I replaced it with an SMC and never had problems since. Also, my P2, when I raised the BUS on the 350 from 100 to 133, the PCI/AGP divider didn't support this change, they stayed stuck at 1/3 and 2/3, so my AGP BUS was 87MHz and PCI was
44MHz, and that never had any issues either. It was using a Voodoo 5 5500, 3M NIC, Netodragon 56k modem, and an Creative Labs Ensoniq AudioPCI.
Quote:so what do you think, is increasing the fsb by, let's say, 5-10MHz still stable?
Only way to know is to find out
But those temps are very concerning.
Quote:hint: I'm using an arctic cooling copper silent 2 (cools up to 3400+), my ram is also overclocked via timings (not by clock)
I don't know much about OCing ram, because I got 166MHz ram anyways, so I'm all set. I would take a look at replacing your thermal compound, since your cooler itself doesn't seem to be an issue. Poor thermal transfer can lead to pockets of heat, which would give results like you're getting.