if i remember correctly (it has been almost 2 yrs since i did this) i believe i upped the VID to 1.3 v or so.
but since i always really wanted a 3.0 ghz machine but at the time could not afford the processor, and this can safely go to that speed i decided to go against my beliefs so that i had the best of both worlds for myself.
interesting.. didnt know freesoft had a prime95 for linux 64. got that too just to have it. could be useful.
so in0 is the Vcore and its voltage matches the cpu0_vid... which i find out appears to be a static listing. it never moves so maybe it reads something from the cpu? dunno.
the sensors core0VID is the VID as reported by the chip itself. still there is a difference between linux and windows.linux says it is 1.219 while coretemp reports it as 1.2500
under load after 4 iterations of the smal fft testcore0=56core1=56core2=51core3=51cpuz coreV=1.2500 initially then after a few seconds drops to 1.216
played around at 3.6ghz but since i have changed ram from the last time (old ram was crucial ballistix new ram is OCZ low voltage Blade series) I find that at 3.6ghz the lowest besides 1000 i can go is 1200 which the ram plainly complains even upped from 1.8 to 2.0 volts which is .1 v higher than recommended maximum. so i had no success in stability at 3.6ghz so i dropped it to 3.45ghz along with 1152 on the ram (base is 1066) and VCore set at 1.312v.
the system passed small fft , large ffp and mixed bag with flying colors. i then booted into memtest86 and ran 2 iterations of its test and all passed just fine.
what do you run on your cpus? multibeam or astropulse? do you find astropulse gives higher credit than the equivalent time with MB would?