underclocking an acorp pentium board
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underclocking an acorp pentium board
I just bought the motherboard from here
http://www.compgeeks.com/details.asp?invtid=DUALGEEK
and like an idiot, I bout two pentium 3 1.13 gigahertz chips. Turns out the board can only take 1 gigahertz, and I now have two opened chip sets. I am hopinh that there is someway to underclock my chips so the board will take them. Any help would be very much appreciated. I am not too excited about buying anothing board.
Thanks.
Earl
http://www.compgeeks.com/details.asp?invtid=DUALGEEK
and like an idiot, I bout two pentium 3 1.13 gigahertz chips. Turns out the board can only take 1 gigahertz, and I now have two opened chip sets. I am hopinh that there is someway to underclock my chips so the board will take them. Any help would be very much appreciated. I am not too excited about buying anothing board.
Thanks.
Earl
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- Posts: 262
- Joined: Sun Aug 11, 2002 3:26 pm
- Location: Worcester, UK
Have you actually tried them? I think you'll find they'll probably work ok. Probably only 1GHz P3s were available when they wrote the spec - give em a go, and i think you'll be happy
My last mobo said it only went up to 700MHz, 'crap', i thought as i had a 800Mhz P3 in the same package - but it worked just fine. As long as the mobo supports the FSB (which yours does), then the multiplier of the CPU shouldn't cause any probs.
My last mobo said it only went up to 700MHz, 'crap', i thought as i had a 800Mhz P3 in the same package - but it worked just fine. As long as the mobo supports the FSB (which yours does), then the multiplier of the CPU shouldn't cause any probs.
underclocking an acorp pentium board
Yeah I tried them and all I got was an ee-oo-ee-oo-ee-oo-ee sound coming out. Then I tried a couple 1 ghz chip sitting around here at work and it botted up fine. So, I figured it was that extra .133 ghz that was getting me down. I have no way of testing my chips to see if they really are good.
Thanks,
Earl
Thanks,
Earl
Well that doesn't sound good. Have you tried the board with only 1 processor? If all else fails you can always sell the 1.13's on Ebay. It looks like they've been selling for about the same price as 1Ghz's, so you could probably sell your pair and buy a pair without losing too much.
I would also try finding someone to trade you 1Ghz's for your 1.13's if you can't get them to work. I've had good luck on the Anandtech trading forum. http://forums.anandtech.com/ Just make sure that you trade for processors that have matched stepping codes.
Good luck
I would also try finding someone to trade you 1Ghz's for your 1.13's if you can't get them to work. I've had good luck on the Anandtech trading forum. http://forums.anandtech.com/ Just make sure that you trade for processors that have matched stepping codes.
Good luck
Just to check, you do have the 512K cache 1.13 Ghz CPU's right? The 256K cache 1.13 are much more common, but don't work in a dual CPU configuration.
I don't think underclocking is a solution. The 1.13 are Tualatin core Pentium III's correct? To use the Tualatin on a 815 requires a different revision of the 815 chipset than the one used on the Acorp board. I believe it's a voltage and bus signaling issue.
I think you can get it work with that motherboard if you willing to buy some Tualatin adapters. I can look it up if you're interested.
(Or did Intel ever make coppermine 1.13 P3s? Don't remember...)
I don't think underclocking is a solution. The 1.13 are Tualatin core Pentium III's correct? To use the Tualatin on a 815 requires a different revision of the 815 chipset than the one used on the Acorp board. I believe it's a voltage and bus signaling issue.
I think you can get it work with that motherboard if you willing to buy some Tualatin adapters. I can look it up if you're interested.
(Or did Intel ever make coppermine 1.13 P3s? Don't remember...)
Hmm, Intel motherboards? I don't know of any Intel motherboards that can support dual Tualatins.
The problem is the chipset:
440BX - does not support Tualatin (unless you find a slot 1 with an adapter, ugh)
i810 - no dual CPU
i815 - only the dual Acorp exists
i820 - no Tualatin Support and requires rambus
I do know of several Via chipset motherboard that accept dual Tualatins. I think some decent ones are made by Supermicro and Iwill. Maybe others too.
The problem is the chipset:
440BX - does not support Tualatin (unless you find a slot 1 with an adapter, ugh)
i810 - no dual CPU
i815 - only the dual Acorp exists
i820 - no Tualatin Support and requires rambus
I do know of several Via chipset motherboard that accept dual Tualatins. I think some decent ones are made by Supermicro and Iwill. Maybe others too.