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It's very easy to increase the Vcore of the SOYO
SY KT400A Dragon Lite mainboard by soldering
just one resistor to the right point to allow your CPU much higher frequency.
Of course it's necessary to be very careful if you're soldering something
on your mainboard in order not to kill
your board.
And of course your warranty void if you solder anything on your mainboard
!
Therefore i recommend a good grounding and a soldering station with
seperate grounding !
The HIP 6301 is the voltage regulator
of the Soyo mainboard (multi-phase Buck PWM CONTROLLER).
This voltage regulator have a pin (FB/pin 7) for the voltage correction
to allow manufacturers an optimal adaption
of the Vcore and we can also use this pin to increase the vcore to "our
correct Vcore" :-)
In my test i used a normal 1/4 Watt resistor
with 10 K.
It's also possible to solder a SMD resistor (103 = 10K) from pin 7 (FB)
to Pin 9 (GND).
This picture show you the position of the HIP 6301 voltage regulator
IC:

And here's once again a large photo of the HIP6301 Vcore regulator IC:

In the enlargement i've marked the two points where you have to solder
the resistor to.
The left point is Pin 7 (FB) and the right point is Pin 9 (GND), of course
you can use another ground instead of Pin 9,
for example the upper right hole, where you normally mount the mainboard
to your case backside.
You shouldn't solder the resistor directly to the board in order to modify
the resistance value once again.
Just solder the resistor to a cable and then solder this cable to the
marked pins.
After this modification you should check the correct position and check
if there's no tin at a wrong place !!!
Now put adhesive tape or a small piece of heat shrink sleeve over the
resistor that it's impossible to get
a connection with the case or other components.
After this small modification your Vcore should be 0,2
Volt higher than you've selected in your BIOS.
That means if you select a Vcore of 1,5 V the real ! Vcore is 1,7 Volt
and with a selection of 1,75 V
you'll get 1,95 V Core voltage.
And you'll get the highest Vcore of 2,04 Volt
if you set the voltage in your BIOS to 1,85 Volt.
Here's the PC-Health menu display at 1,85 Volt:

And if that's still not enough for your CPU you could solder a smaller
resistance value but the risk
to destroy the processor is much higher.
Or use a variable resistor with 25 K, solder it to a 1 K resistor to prevent
lower resistor values than 1 K and
solder this to the two red points as shown in the picture above.
Pay attention to the CPU temperature after increasing
the Vcore !!!
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