When you enter Gigabyte HQ in Taiwan, get your visitor’s pass, head towards the elevators and make your way up to the fourth floor. Get out of the elevator, take a left, and then another left. Here is the Gigabyte OC Lab in all its glory.

The principle of the OC Lab is simple – a place for HiCookie to dismantle any PCB he wishes: three fully functional desks packed to the rafters with soldering equipment, scopes, multimeters and temperature gauges to test hardware on, a whiteboard to discuss voltages and ideas, and the fridge stocked with refreshments. The walls are top to bottom with cupboards hiding all manner of broken and to-be-broken hardware, spare motherboards, trays of CPUs or memory (pre-tested and binned), and on the floor are several plastic boxes filled with dead hardware. These are either failed modification attempts, burned out phases, or hardware that died while being overclocked. Every so often I came across a dead Titan PCB and wept softly.

A dead GTX480

Several dead motherboards and GPUs

Having a dedicated space to overclocking within such an OC focused company as Gigabyte seems like a no-brainer. Before this OC Lab was built earlier in 2013, HiCookie had several benches in the main office as well as 6 or seven cubicles for the hardware he was using and testing. Moving it into the OC Lab (an old storeroom) has freed up those cubicles for software developers in the main office, but it also allows Gigabyte to invite other overclockers to come and test their hardware.

OC Lab Success

Within the week of Computex, Corsair and Intel held an overclocking contest and invited a large number of overclockers to compete – both individual and company sponsored overclockers alike were represented. The team from Gigabyte consisted of HiCookie, former world #1, and Dino, who is both a Gigabyte employee and world renowned overclocker in his own right, being part of the Team.AU squad.

The overclocking contest lasted six hours in Marquee, a restaurant/lounge in the middle of Taipei, with a total prize fund up for grabs of $20,000. The top prize of $5,000 went to the best SuperPi 32M score, $4,000 to the highest memory overclock, and then $1,000 each for other CPU and GPU related categories such as Aquamark, 3DMark06, 3DMark Firestrike Extreme and others.

While I did not catch the event in its entirety, I was able to swing by the location just as they were packing up and the results had been announced. Fellow UK overclocker 8-Pack had taken home the big money prize in SuperPi 32M, but HiCookie and Dino were able to score a win in the memory overclock stage, bringing home an award on Gigabyte hardware, a shiny trophy, and a nice big check.

The OC Lab was the source of the preparation for the event, with HiCookie and Dino spending most of the week previous discussing how to proceed on the day, and how to best use the time. Aside from product development, this will be the main use for the OC Lab, especially in the run up to big overclocking events. Most of the overclocking community is hopeful that Intel+Corsair run a similar event for many years to come.

OC Lab Weekend

For the overclocking weekend itself, where Gigabyte opened the doors to over a dozen overclockers, there was no schedule as such. Alongside a number of motherboards, Gigabyte provided a tray of CPUs to use – several Intel i7-4770Ks and a few Richland A10-6800K APUs. Corsair was also on hand to provide power supplies, coolers and some memory.

Gigabyte also ordered in some extra special hardware. Four Gigabyte GTX Titans were also available for the overclockers to use, as long as they were not modded! For several of the overclockers who had not had chance to use Haswell before release, this was a fine chance to get to know the systems, as well as test it with Titans.

Over the weekend the following users and overclockers were present and ready to bench, coming from far and wide representing many different nations:

HiCookie (TW), the Gigabyte in-house overclocker
Dino (AUS), from Gigabyte Australia and Team.AU
Pro (AUS), from Team.AU
borandi (UK), from AnandTech and UK ProOC Team 5xP
Massman (BE), from HWBot.org
SDougal (UK), from Gigabyte HQ
Finn, from Corsair
Cpt.Planet/Jake (US) from Corsair
Christian Ney (SWI), memory overclocker extraordinaire
Lucky_n00b (IND) from ProOC Team JagatReview
Coldest (IND) from JagatReview
der8auer (GER)
Gamer (BE)
RedMax (US)
zzolio (DEN)
sin0822 (US)
ZoLKoRn (THI)
sofos1990 (GRE)
M.Beier (DEN)
Trouffman (FRA)
Leeghoofd (BE)

Whiteboard for voltage talk or motivation!

An internal test bench

Getting frosty

Some air-testing on Titan

Some CPUs floating around

The highlight of the weekend was something I missed entirely. Dino and Jake hit 7 GHz on one of their 4770K CPUs in testing, while I happened to be in another room.

Soldering iron at the ready

A couple of Titan boxes hidden away

3DMark in full swing

Thermos flasks for LN2

Preparation for some CPU benchmarks

zzolio making some BIOS changes

The fan is to move the LN2 vapor away from the system - this helps reduce condensation

Another system being set up

HiCookie starting at 6.8 GHz while under cold

sin0822 going for maximum BCLK

Pro and zzolio on 3DMark

Dual Titans with a cold CPU

Competitive Overclocking: The GIGABYTE OC Lab and HWBot Interview with HWBot.org and GIGABYTE
Comments Locked

17 Comments

View All Comments

  • Xtreme Addict - Thursday, June 20, 2013 - link

    Very good article. Easy to read, it explains some basic ideas about extreme oc. Good job :)
  • c3p - Thursday, June 20, 2013 - link

    The part from "HWBot is supported by several hardware manufacturers, including GIGABYTE[...]" till "push world records higher."
    is pretty redundant to that at the top. I'm pretty sure that was not supposed to be there.
  • goinginstyle - Thursday, June 20, 2013 - link

    Considering Gigabyte is the primary sponsor (just look in the HWBot forums as it is not neutral for other board suppliers) I think the comment was supposed to emphasize Gigabyte's role. Kind of like this whole article reads as a Gigabyte advertorial for the most part, which is fine if that is the intent.
  • c3p - Thursday, June 20, 2013 - link

    Yep, as a "normal PC guy" it's always pretty interesting to see the real pros pushing the limits!
  • Massman - Thursday, June 20, 2013 - link

    What exactly is interesting for you to see pros push the limits of? I have been looking closer at the comment rates of overclocking records posted at various mainstream media, and don't really see that much interest generated for let's say another memory frequency record.

    So, essentially the question is: what makes your "normal PC guy" clock tick?
  • iamkyle - Friday, June 21, 2013 - link

    Roots shirt! Canada represent!
  • c3p - Saturday, June 22, 2013 - link

    It's like in other areas (for example swimming):
    It is not so much the individual record that interesting, but more the big picture of what is actually possible.
    So i'm not always in the forums and up-to-date about the newest stuff, but i like to read a bigger piece once/twice a year summing up the possibilities, what tricks they use and what they want to do next.

Log in

Don't have an account? Sign up now