No visit to a HQ would be complete with a look at the dedicated overclock testing facilities. The concept of an OC Lab has been brewing, especially in the motherboard industry, for a number of years and especially in companies that hold world-wide overclocking competitions. While our previous visits to these labs are usually separate rooms connected to a generic office structure, MSI’s is part of an open-cubicle office, just with higher walls and more ventilation for liquid nitrogen vapor.

At the time we visited, MSI had invited several high-profile overclockers who were present during Computex to come and test equipment. As shown above, Lucky_n00b (Alva Jonathan from Jagat Review) was testing a tray of CPUs with Cinebench. The testing being done at the time included Broadwell processors, MSI’s new X99A Gaming Godlike motherboard and other systems which we were not allowed to photograph. The OC Lab is still in construction, as the elements on the wall shown in the picture are meant to be connected and provide several stations of water cooling via a full-room water cooling set of apparatus, provided in conjunction with Bitspower.

The purpose of the OC Lab, aside from helping generate world record overclocking results for MSI, is two-fold – pushing hardware to the limit, and aiding the overclocking community. This means high frequency RAM kit QVL testing, among other things, as shown above. MSI has several high profile overclockers either employed full-time or acting in a consultancy capacity, and given my own background as an extreme overclocker and former world #2, we had some interesting discussions about the state of extreme overclocking.

The HQ Tour was ultimately short and sweet – there’s little to see beyond rows of cubicles of people designing and testing hardware or marketing/sales doing their normal things. As I mentioned at the top of the piece, spending time with MSI was also in part to discuss with the engineers and BIOS/software designers about the current state of the industry and what end-users might be looking forward to. As part of those discussions, we were able to do a combined interview with three of MSI’s VIPs – Charles Chiang (Executive VP & GM of DPS Business Unit), Ted Hung (VP of Motherboard Sales), and Andy Tung (President of MSI Pan America). This is still being transcribed and will be posted in a separate piece in the near future.

 

The Testing Labs
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  • Murloc - Tuesday, July 7, 2015 - link

    first!
  • jtd871 - Tuesday, July 7, 2015 - link

    Typos 1st page
    "queues" should be "cues"
    "matt" should be "matte"
  • Ian Cutress - Tuesday, July 7, 2015 - link

    Corrected - thanks :)
  • chizow - Tuesday, July 7, 2015 - link

    For those wondering, this is where you get most of your pre-launch leaks. NDA parts from all PC hardware vendors undergoing testing/validation by labrats/enthusiasts/gamers on some of the same racks and benches. :)
  • der - Tuesday, July 7, 2015 - link

    4th comment!
  • Stuka87 - Tuesday, July 7, 2015 - link

    Thanks for the tour, brings back old memories of my previous job.
  • rjashton - Tuesday, July 7, 2015 - link

    Pretty interesting to see this - bit different from the normal coverage!
  • WorldWithoutMadness - Tuesday, July 7, 2015 - link

    No wonder the designs are pretty bleak, they referenced the wrong products.
    They should get reference from BAC mono or Jag E-type for examples.
    Yes, they can design but no, they don't have the taste
  • Freaky_Angelus - Wednesday, July 8, 2015 - link

    Considering a certain person has spare time and has experience setting up a 'mood room' when working on Jeff...

    Why not?

    But seriously, I do agree. I don't really like MSI for their designs that much (given the GT80 dropped my jaw) and seeing what they use for references... You'll always have a lag on designs so you'll have to look forward rather a bit to know what forward a small bit will be like. That means supercars, extraordinary designs and sci-fi for sources. How common is using a tablet now, it was sci-fi in series like TNG.

    That said, given their rather interesting set of test facilities, the products then coming out deserve also more fame ;) Thank you for enlighting me on MSI!
  • chrnochime - Wednesday, July 8, 2015 - link

    E-type is a classic car. Gamers like cutting edge design, which that is most certainly not.

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