TheOverclocker Issue 29 | Page 6

QA with Jon “Elmor” Sandström Country Name and City: I grew up in Härnösand, Sweden but I’m currently living in Taipei, Taiwan. What language(s) do you speak? Swedish, English , some German and Chinese Your nickname elmor, seems like this story has been told lots of times, but once again for those who do not know. How did you come about this nickname? Pretty much it’s a name I randomly came up with for using while playing games at LAN parties with friends. Your overclocking, I’m talking LN2 and all that, when did it begin and what got you hooked? After building my own computer as a teenager I started comparing its performance with friends’ setups using 3DMark01. This soon resulted in discovering overclocking through internet forums which lead to competing with people online. This got me hooked and I started trying out voltage modifications, dry ice and from there the step to LN2 was not far. Which is your favourite benchmark if any and what is your least favourite and why ? 3DMark01, it’s what got me started and has always been a lot of fun during my years of overclocking through all its dimensions. You’ve worked with MSI for some time or at least through various generations of both motherboards and graphics cards. How did that relationship begin and what was it that made you go your separate ways? The initial connection was made during the yearly MOA competitions. When I decided to go to Taiwan for 6 The OverClocker Issue 29 | 2014 exchange studies they contacted me and offered me a part time position. It’s been an on and off thing whenever I was around in Taiwan. Last time it ended because I went to Berlin in order to finish my Master’s degree. for MSI. This is mostly because of declining interest due to actually overclocking for work and because competition is not really fair if you work at the heart of a company in the industry. In your context, what do you consider to be your main challenges regarding overclocking? Do you compete for ranking in any of the leagues or cups? That would be companies locking down their products. Let’s say INTEL decides to stop making a K-skew, there’s not much we can do. Nowadays most products are so highly integrated at an IC level that it’s close to impossible to do hardware modifications to adjust frequency. The days where you could achieve a 50% overclock by simply changing the clock crystal are over. I haven’t been competing seriously pretty much since I started working Between NVIDIA and AMD graphics cards, which ones do you prefer to overclock or does it make no difference for you? I don’t really mind either way but traditionally I’ve preferred NVIDIA cards due to high overclocking margins and less issues related to overclocking. Their advantage in 3DMark01 is not hurting things either. You’re originally from Sweden but have lived all over the place essentially? What’s the place that is the most fun for you and which place has the cheapest LN2 (and beer)? Sweden (Stockholm) is a very