clock doubling - Definition. Was ist clock doubling
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Was (wer) ist clock doubling - definition

MECHANISM THAT SETS THE RATIO OF AN INTERNAL CPU CLOCK RATE TO THE EXTERNALLY SUPPLIED CLOCK
Clock multiplier; Clock doubling; Bus/core ratio; Core/bus ratio; Bus to core ratio; Unlocked multiplier

grandfather clock         
  • Longcase clock from about 1750 in the District Museum in [[Tarnów]] in Poland, mounted with use of imported components marked ''Wiliam Jourdain London'' and adorned with [[chinoiserie]] motifs
  • Bornholm clock made by Edvart Sonne, from Rønne, [[Bornholm]] in the late 1700s
  • Comtoise clock
  • The "tick-tock" of a grandfather clock
  • Pendulum swinging on a grandfather clock in Japan
  • Most of a longcase clock's height is used to hold the long [[pendulum]] and weights. The two chains attached to the weights and the lack of winding holes in the dial show this to be a 30-hour clock.
  • Madras School of Arts]]. This clock is on display in [[The Prince of Wales Museum]] in [[Mumbai]] and was donated by [[Dorab Tata]].
  • Lateral view of a longcase clock movement without striking mechanism, mid-1800s
  • Clock face circa 1730 [[Timothy Mason (clockmaker)]] of Gainsborough
  • Timothy Mason]] longcase clock movement with striking mechanism, circa 1730
  • Clock-face signature of Tim Mason
  • Longcase clock circa 1730 by [[Timothy Mason (clockmaker)]] of [[Gainsborough, Lincolnshire]]
TALL, FREESTANDING, WEIGHT-DRIVEN PENDULUM CLOCK
Long case clock; Longcase Clock; Grandmother clock; Floor clock; Tall-case clock; Long case Clock; Comtoise clock; Longcase clocks; Granddaughter clock; Bornholm clock; Morbier clock; Morez clock; Eight-day clock; Eight day clock; Grandfather clocks; Longcase clock; Case clock; Grandfather Clock
(grandfather clocks)
A grandfather clock is an old-fashioned type of clock in a tall wooden case which stands upright on the floor.
N-COUNT
Grandfather clock         
  • Longcase clock from about 1750 in the District Museum in [[Tarnów]] in Poland, mounted with use of imported components marked ''Wiliam Jourdain London'' and adorned with [[chinoiserie]] motifs
  • Bornholm clock made by Edvart Sonne, from Rønne, [[Bornholm]] in the late 1700s
  • Comtoise clock
  • The "tick-tock" of a grandfather clock
  • Pendulum swinging on a grandfather clock in Japan
  • Most of a longcase clock's height is used to hold the long [[pendulum]] and weights. The two chains attached to the weights and the lack of winding holes in the dial show this to be a 30-hour clock.
  • Madras School of Arts]]. This clock is on display in [[The Prince of Wales Museum]] in [[Mumbai]] and was donated by [[Dorab Tata]].
  • Lateral view of a longcase clock movement without striking mechanism, mid-1800s
  • Clock face circa 1730 [[Timothy Mason (clockmaker)]] of Gainsborough
  • Timothy Mason]] longcase clock movement with striking mechanism, circa 1730
  • Clock-face signature of Tim Mason
  • Longcase clock circa 1730 by [[Timothy Mason (clockmaker)]] of [[Gainsborough, Lincolnshire]]
TALL, FREESTANDING, WEIGHT-DRIVEN PENDULUM CLOCK
Long case clock; Longcase Clock; Grandmother clock; Floor clock; Tall-case clock; Long case Clock; Comtoise clock; Longcase clocks; Granddaughter clock; Bornholm clock; Morbier clock; Morez clock; Eight-day clock; Eight day clock; Grandfather clocks; Longcase clock; Case clock; Grandfather Clock
A grandfather clock (also a longcase clock, tall-case clock, grandfather's clock, or floor clock) is a tall, freestanding, weight-driven pendulum clock with the pendulum held inside the tower or waist of the case. Clocks of this style are commonly 1.
grandfather clock         
  • Longcase clock from about 1750 in the District Museum in [[Tarnów]] in Poland, mounted with use of imported components marked ''Wiliam Jourdain London'' and adorned with [[chinoiserie]] motifs
  • Bornholm clock made by Edvart Sonne, from Rønne, [[Bornholm]] in the late 1700s
  • Comtoise clock
  • The "tick-tock" of a grandfather clock
  • Pendulum swinging on a grandfather clock in Japan
  • Most of a longcase clock's height is used to hold the long [[pendulum]] and weights. The two chains attached to the weights and the lack of winding holes in the dial show this to be a 30-hour clock.
  • Madras School of Arts]]. This clock is on display in [[The Prince of Wales Museum]] in [[Mumbai]] and was donated by [[Dorab Tata]].
  • Lateral view of a longcase clock movement without striking mechanism, mid-1800s
  • Clock face circa 1730 [[Timothy Mason (clockmaker)]] of Gainsborough
  • Timothy Mason]] longcase clock movement with striking mechanism, circa 1730
  • Clock-face signature of Tim Mason
  • Longcase clock circa 1730 by [[Timothy Mason (clockmaker)]] of [[Gainsborough, Lincolnshire]]
TALL, FREESTANDING, WEIGHT-DRIVEN PENDULUM CLOCK
Long case clock; Longcase Clock; Grandmother clock; Floor clock; Tall-case clock; Long case Clock; Comtoise clock; Longcase clocks; Granddaughter clock; Bornholm clock; Morbier clock; Morez clock; Eight-day clock; Eight day clock; Grandfather clocks; Longcase clock; Case clock; Grandfather Clock
¦ noun a clock in a tall free-standing wooden case, driven by weights.

Wikipedia

CPU multiplier

In computing, the clock multiplier (or CPU multiplier or bus/core ratio) sets the ratio of an internal CPU clock rate to the externally supplied clock. A CPU with a 10x multiplier will thus see 10 internal cycles (produced by PLL-based frequency multiplier circuitry) for every external clock cycle. For example, a system with an external clock of 100 MHz and a 36x clock multiplier will have an internal CPU clock of 3.6 GHz. The external address and data buses of the CPU (often collectively termed front side bus (FSB) in PC contexts) also use the external clock as a fundamental timing base; however, they could also employ a (small) multiple of this base frequency (typically two or four) to transfer data faster.

The internal frequency of microprocessors is usually based on FSB frequency. To calculate internal frequency the CPU multiplies bus frequency by a number called the clock multiplier. For calculation, the CPU uses actual bus frequency, and not effective bus frequency. To determine the actual bus frequency for processors that use dual-data rate (DDR) buses (AMD Athlon and Duron) and quad-data rate buses (all Intel microprocessors starting from Pentium 4) the effective bus speed should be divided by 2 for AMD or 4 for Intel.

Clock multipliers on many modern processors are fixed; it is usually not possible to change them. Some versions of processors have clock multipliers unlocked; that is, they can be "overclocked" by increasing the clock multiplier setting in the motherboard's BIOS setup program. Some CPU engineering samples may also have the clock multiplier unlocked. Many Intel qualification samples have maximum clock multiplier locked: these CPUs may be underclocked (run at lower frequency), but they cannot be overclocked by increasing clock multiplier higher than intended by CPU design. While these qualification samples and majority of production microprocessors cannot be overclocked by increasing their clock multiplier, they still can be overclocked by using a different technique: by increasing FSB frequency.