Tepabajo Posted June 28, 2006 Posted June 28, 2006 Joop, not sure you understood. I saw an email come through from a guy named Joop that is resigning after 5 years with my same employer, and guess what, he also lives in the Netherlands just as your profile says. Either there are a bunch of dudes named Joop that live in the Netherlands or you and I work for the same company. I'm really curious so let's take this offline. Shoot me a PM. Share this post Link to post Share on other sites More sharing options...
matthewsr2000 Posted July 1, 2006 Posted July 1, 2006 great guide!! i used your howto in changing my 12 and 5 volt readouts. i was wondering if there is a way to change the 3.3v. . . ? mine's reading a little low, 3.1, which isn't a big deal. i checked it with a multimeter, reads true ~3.31v. just would be nice to have it right like the rest. thanks again! Share this post Link to post Share on other sites More sharing options...
Joop Posted July 4, 2006 Posted July 4, 2006 Thanks!, unfortunately I have not found a way to compensate the 3.3 rail. Share this post Link to post Share on other sites More sharing options...
oxia Posted July 24, 2006 Posted July 24, 2006 Share this post Link to post Share on other sites More sharing options...
jaz Posted September 22, 2006 Posted September 22, 2006 Hi Joop...I'm using your nf3 250Gb SG mod. I like it very much, kudos to you for your efforts. A question...my chipset reads 1.55V in red most of the time, but then turns to white text when it reads 1.56V. It turns into white text (1.56V) about every 30 seconds. Is this something i should be concerned about? Is there a fix for it? When i used dfi's defualt SG it always stayed @1.56V. Share this post Link to post Share on other sites More sharing options...
Joop Posted September 23, 2006 Posted September 23, 2006 Thanks Jaz for the friendly words Nothing to worry and yes you can simple fix it within Smartguardian, press Option and choose Voltage, here you can change all the Voltage percentages. This is a example of (my OverClock voltage range) %age setting: Within 'smart.ini' you can even change the DefaultTemp= (Milli-Voltage) to your specifics CPU, Memory and the Chipset voltage. 'smart.ini' useful voltage parts, examples: ///////////////////////////////////////////////////// [VIN0] 'CPU Data Top=3050 Left=1210 Visible=-1 DefaultTemp=150 'e.g. for a Mobile CPU set to yours specific DefaultTemp= xxx (mV) Enable=1 Percent=20 '<-- Changing with Smartguardian Option Voltage %age [VIN1] 'nF3=CHIPSET Data Top=3450 Left=1200 Visible=-1 DefaultTemp=160 'e.g. you can compensate to you reading Chipset 1.56V with set DefaultTemp=156 (mV) Enable=1 Percent=10 '<-- Changing with Smartguardian Option Voltage %age ///////////////////////////////////////////////////// [VIN6] ' DRAM Data Top=4190 Left=1190 Visible=-1 DefaultTemp=260 'e.g. compensate this for your specific memory (BH5, CH5 or TCCD etc.) set DefaultTemp= xxx (mV) Enable=1 Percent=10 '<-- Changing with Smartguardian Option Voltage %age ///////////////////////////////////////////////////// Share this post Link to post Share on other sites More sharing options...
Joop Posted September 23, 2006 Posted September 23, 2006 Thanks Jaz for the friendly words Nothing to worry and yes you can simple fix it within Smartguardian, press Option and choose Voltage, here you can change all the Voltage percentages. This is a example of (my OverClock voltage range) %age setting: Within 'smart.ini' you can even change the DefaultTemp= (Milli-Voltage) to your specifics CPU, Memory and the Chipset voltage. 'smart.ini' useful voltage parts, examples: ///////////////////////////////////////////////////// [VIN0] 'CPU Data Top=3050 Left=1210 Visible=-1 DefaultTemp=150 'e.g. for a Mobile CPU set to yours specific DefaultTemp= xxx (mV) Enable=1 Percent=20 '<-- Changing with Smartguardian Option Voltage %age [VIN1] 'nF3=CHIPSET Data Top=3450 Left=1200 Visible=-1 DefaultTemp=160 'e.g. you can compensate to you reading Chipset 1.56V with set DefaultTemp=156 (mV) Enable=1 Percent=10 '<-- Changing with Smartguardian Option Voltage %age ///////////////////////////////////////////////////// [VIN6] ' DRAM Data Top=4190 Left=1190 Visible=-1 DefaultTemp=260 'e.g. compensate this for your specific memory (BH5, CH5 or TCCD etc.) set DefaultTemp= xxx (mV) Enable=1 Percent=10 '<-- Changing with Smartguardian Option Voltage %age ///////////////////////////////////////////////////// Share this post Link to post Share on other sites More sharing options...
jaz Posted September 23, 2006 Posted September 23, 2006 Thanks Joop! Works like a charm. I may mod it more later. Fun to play with :-) Share this post Link to post Share on other sites More sharing options...
Tedy Posted September 25, 2006 Posted September 25, 2006 any options this program to work in SUSE 10.1 ? Share this post Link to post Share on other sites More sharing options...
Joop Posted September 27, 2006 Posted September 27, 2006 AFAIK, ITE's (T8712F) Smartguardian' works only with Windows, sadly no Linux support. Share this post Link to post Share on other sites More sharing options...
expresso Posted October 13, 2006 Posted October 13, 2006 i been seeing alot of different colors and pictures of smart guardian but i dont know how to change my colors etc. - is this a new version of smart ? if so - can i have a link to down load it thanks Share this post Link to post Share on other sites More sharing options...
Joop Posted October 15, 2006 Posted October 15, 2006 POST #1 Personalized Smartguardian: ...... Within 'smart.ini' you can change anything with notepad e.g. color codes, names, size, locations etc. The 'logo.bmp' file is original a black background, you can replace that with you own created background or your chosen picture etc., logo's etc. Btw: this thread is only for the DFI nF3 Smartguardian versions, your DFI nF4 mobo use a different Smartguardian, for the nF4 downloads and nice examples from other guy's go to Smartguardian[DFI nF4 Special] (link in my sig.) This: ShowCoNo" from Marián Pánik is a very handy Color code tool. Hope this help Share this post Link to post Share on other sites More sharing options...
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