PIII 500 -> 650 MHz
PIII 500 -> 650 MHz
I know I've seen instructions how to hack a 650 MHz PIII so it'll run at its full speed. But I can't find it now... (What I remember is a well illustrated page with instructions)
Anyone have an idea?
Anyone have an idea?
TP 600E:: Type: 2645 (Defunct. Description left for posterity.)
CPU: 650*1.08=702 MHz PIII with SpeedStep disabled. (Used to be 400 MHz PII)
RAM: 288 MB
HDD: 80 GB non-IBM
_________
TP T60:: Type: 2008-CTO
CPU: Core Duo T2400 1.83 GHz
RAM: 3 GB
HDD: WD Scorpio Black 320GB 7200 RPM
CPU: 650*1.08=702 MHz PIII with SpeedStep disabled. (Used to be 400 MHz PII)
RAM: 288 MB
HDD: 80 GB non-IBM
_________
TP T60:: Type: 2008-CTO
CPU: Core Duo T2400 1.83 GHz
RAM: 3 GB
HDD: WD Scorpio Black 320GB 7200 RPM
Re: PIII 500 -> 650 MHz
Here it is:nitro2k01 wrote:I know I've seen instructions how to hack a 650 MHz PIII so it'll run at its full speed. But I can't find it now... (What I remember is a well illustrated page with instructions)
Anyone have an idea?
Modthepad.
X32/2.0GHZ/2GB/ENGENIUS EMP-8602+S 600mw mini pci/WD 250GB
X60/1.83GHZ/2GB/Atheros/7K100
X60/1.83GHZ/2GB/Atheros/7K100
Thanks!
Btw, another question (I don't want to start another thread for this)
I have the INET36WW BIOS. This means I have the latest BIOS revision, right?
Btw, another question (I don't want to start another thread for this)
I have the INET36WW BIOS. This means I have the latest BIOS revision, right?
TP 600E:: Type: 2645 (Defunct. Description left for posterity.)
CPU: 650*1.08=702 MHz PIII with SpeedStep disabled. (Used to be 400 MHz PII)
RAM: 288 MB
HDD: 80 GB non-IBM
_________
TP T60:: Type: 2008-CTO
CPU: Core Duo T2400 1.83 GHz
RAM: 3 GB
HDD: WD Scorpio Black 320GB 7200 RPM
CPU: 650*1.08=702 MHz PIII with SpeedStep disabled. (Used to be 400 MHz PII)
RAM: 288 MB
HDD: 80 GB non-IBM
_________
TP T60:: Type: 2008-CTO
CPU: Core Duo T2400 1.83 GHz
RAM: 3 GB
HDD: WD Scorpio Black 320GB 7200 RPM
And another thing: If my CPU is running at 500 MHz, 100 MHz FSB now, doesn't that mean that 108 MHz FSB will yield a 540 MHz core frequency? Or is the multiplier increased to 6?
TP 600E:: Type: 2645 (Defunct. Description left for posterity.)
CPU: 650*1.08=702 MHz PIII with SpeedStep disabled. (Used to be 400 MHz PII)
RAM: 288 MB
HDD: 80 GB non-IBM
_________
TP T60:: Type: 2008-CTO
CPU: Core Duo T2400 1.83 GHz
RAM: 3 GB
HDD: WD Scorpio Black 320GB 7200 RPM
CPU: 650*1.08=702 MHz PIII with SpeedStep disabled. (Used to be 400 MHz PII)
RAM: 288 MB
HDD: 80 GB non-IBM
_________
TP T60:: Type: 2008-CTO
CPU: Core Duo T2400 1.83 GHz
RAM: 3 GB
HDD: WD Scorpio Black 320GB 7200 RPM
Didrik,nitro2k01 wrote:And another thing: If my CPU is running at 500 MHz, 100 MHz FSB now, doesn't that mean that 108 MHz FSB will yield a 540 MHz core frequency? Or is the multiplier increased to 6?
The multiplier will be the same (5) what will change will be the FSB (108).
And yes you got the latest BIOS.
Version: INET36WW (1.16)
Release Date: 2001/10/12
X32/2.0GHZ/2GB/ENGENIUS EMP-8602+S 600mw mini pci/WD 250GB
X60/1.83GHZ/2GB/Atheros/7K100
X60/1.83GHZ/2GB/Atheros/7K100
What confused me about the BIOS is that in the BIOS it says 1999, but on the page it says 2001. Good to have that clear.
I now saw that the FSB overclock and speedstep hack are separate.
I've now applied the speedstep hack, but I haven't re-assembled the computer, so I don't know if it works yet. Do I dare to make the 8% overclock as well? Will it increase heat dissipation 8% as expected, or more than that?
Is it adviced to replace the (plastic?) film on the heatsink with regular silicon paste. (That's what I have at hand) Or is the existing film better?
I now saw that the FSB overclock and speedstep hack are separate.
I've now applied the speedstep hack, but I haven't re-assembled the computer, so I don't know if it works yet. Do I dare to make the 8% overclock as well? Will it increase heat dissipation 8% as expected, or more than that?
Is it adviced to replace the (plastic?) film on the heatsink with regular silicon paste. (That's what I have at hand) Or is the existing film better?
Last edited by nitro2k01 on Sun Oct 13, 2013 2:27 pm, edited 1 time in total.
TP 600E:: Type: 2645 (Defunct. Description left for posterity.)
CPU: 650*1.08=702 MHz PIII with SpeedStep disabled. (Used to be 400 MHz PII)
RAM: 288 MB
HDD: 80 GB non-IBM
_________
TP T60:: Type: 2008-CTO
CPU: Core Duo T2400 1.83 GHz
RAM: 3 GB
HDD: WD Scorpio Black 320GB 7200 RPM
CPU: 650*1.08=702 MHz PIII with SpeedStep disabled. (Used to be 400 MHz PII)
RAM: 288 MB
HDD: 80 GB non-IBM
_________
TP T60:: Type: 2008-CTO
CPU: Core Duo T2400 1.83 GHz
RAM: 3 GB
HDD: WD Scorpio Black 320GB 7200 RPM
Same thing happened with me with the 600X.nitro2k01 wrote:What confused me about the BIOS is that in the BIOS it says 1999, but on the page it says 2001. Good to have that clear.
My advice would be to get a 600X heatsink, i have read somewhere that it cools better the cpu when you do the overclocking.Will it increase heat dissipation 8% as expected, or more than that?
Is it adviced to replace the (plastic?) film on the heatsink with regular silicon paste. (That's what I have at hand) Or is the existing film better?
X32/2.0GHZ/2GB/ENGENIUS EMP-8602+S 600mw mini pci/WD 250GB
X60/1.83GHZ/2GB/Atheros/7K100
X60/1.83GHZ/2GB/Atheros/7K100
My MobileMeter trip
I've run MM for a while to make sure everything is working fine.
First I let it run while I was surfing the net a bit, and the temp was about 50°C. (Going between 45-55°C, fan at full or almost full throttle all the time) That's a pretty acceptable temp according to me. Then I put a bit of workload on the CPU. After letting it work at 60% load for a few minutes the tmep rose to 80°C. That's when I didn't dare go higher.
Thinking about it, the table it is standing on is not very heat conductive
But still, what is an accetable temp to keep for an extended period of time? Is 70°C ok? 80?
Also, how reliable are the thermal zones on the 600E, when it ocmes to giving you the right figures? And where are they placed? (The one mentioned above was the one changing the most and going the highest. I suspect this one is close to CPU. But how close?)
First I let it run while I was surfing the net a bit, and the temp was about 50°C. (Going between 45-55°C, fan at full or almost full throttle all the time) That's a pretty acceptable temp according to me. Then I put a bit of workload on the CPU. After letting it work at 60% load for a few minutes the tmep rose to 80°C. That's when I didn't dare go higher.
Thinking about it, the table it is standing on is not very heat conductive
But still, what is an accetable temp to keep for an extended period of time? Is 70°C ok? 80?
Also, how reliable are the thermal zones on the 600E, when it ocmes to giving you the right figures? And where are they placed? (The one mentioned above was the one changing the most and going the highest. I suspect this one is close to CPU. But how close?)
TP 600E:: Type: 2645 (Defunct. Description left for posterity.)
CPU: 650*1.08=702 MHz PIII with SpeedStep disabled. (Used to be 400 MHz PII)
RAM: 288 MB
HDD: 80 GB non-IBM
_________
TP T60:: Type: 2008-CTO
CPU: Core Duo T2400 1.83 GHz
RAM: 3 GB
HDD: WD Scorpio Black 320GB 7200 RPM
CPU: 650*1.08=702 MHz PIII with SpeedStep disabled. (Used to be 400 MHz PII)
RAM: 288 MB
HDD: 80 GB non-IBM
_________
TP T60:: Type: 2008-CTO
CPU: Core Duo T2400 1.83 GHz
RAM: 3 GB
HDD: WD Scorpio Black 320GB 7200 RPM
Re: PIII 500 -> 650 MHz
Sorry to reply in an older thread (it's Sticky though), but this link seems dead. Any other place where this information is?cmarti wrote:Here it is:nitro2k01 wrote:I know I've seen instructions how to hack a 650 MHz PIII so it'll run at its full speed. But I can't find it now... (What I remember is a well illustrated page with instructions)
Anyone have an idea?
Modthepad.
Thnx.
I wish there was a serious successor to the TP570..
T61 15" 4:3 QXGA @ daylight LED, Core2 Quad QX9300, 8 GB RAM, 1 TB SSD
X62t, SXGA+ @ daylight LED, Core i7 5500U, 16 GB RAM, 120 GB SSD, additional power plug on the left side
770X @ Pentium III , 600X @ Sandy Bridge Core i3 1,4 GHz
X62t, SXGA+ @ daylight LED, Core i7 5500U, 16 GB RAM, 120 GB SSD, additional power plug on the left side
770X @ Pentium III , 600X @ Sandy Bridge Core i3 1,4 GHz
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