Archived from groups: alt.comp.periphs.mainboard.asus (
More info?)
emc2 wrote:
> that looks like good advice P2B, have you done this to your system?
I have upgraded *many* P2B-x and P3B-x systems using Slot-T adapters and
Tualatin processors. However,I usually upgrade the memory to at least
PC133 and run the FSB at 133Mhz or higher - because memory becomes the
performance bottleneck when you install a 1Ghz+ processor on these boards.
Upgrading the memory as well would give you better performance, but
would also increase your cost considerably unless you can obtain used
PC133 memory cheaply.
I have no hesitation in recommending the Slot-T/Tualatin combo to you -
easy to install and great performance for the price, without
compromising the legendary stability of BX boards.
> 84 bucks and change for 1.4 ghz speed sounds awesome.
Cheaper than the much slower PIIIs you were considering
Be absolutely sure your P3B-F is revision 1.03 or higher before you
order - older boards cannot supply the correct voltage for the Tualatin CPU.
> do you know what I have to do to my mother board for this to be used?
> such as switches or what ever else to set?
You probably won't need to do anything except plug it in - you already
have the latest BIOS (which is required), and are probably already
running at 100Mhz FSB (set the switches to 100Mhz FSB if not). The
default jumper settings on the Slot-T don't need changing.
The first time you power on with the new CPU, the BIOS will probably
complain that "Hardware Monitor found an error". Go into the BIOS power
management page, check that the CPU Vcore is 1.5v (it will say "1.5v
[ERR]"), then set the BIOS to ignore Vcore because 1.5v is correct but
the BIOS thinks it's wrong.
Once it's up and running, you can try a slight overclock - setting the
FSB to 112Mhz will run the CPU at 1.57Ghz, and there's a very good
chance your CPU, memory, and other components will also tolerate a 12%
overclock without problems.
P2B
> "P2B" <p2b@sympatico.ca> wrote in message
> news:tuANc.23185$i_2.986702@news20.bellglobal.com...
>
>>
>>emc2 wrote:
>>
>>>wow..thanks John, you sound like the guy that knows ..
>>>what I'm looking to do is put in the most with the
>
> least amount of confusion
>
>>>and use the same memorey I have now.
>>>I went to geek.com and saw this.....PIII 800MHz 256KB Slot-1 SECC2
>
> 100Mhz
>
>>>PIII 800MHz 256KB Slot-1 SECC2 100Mhz and the PIII 850MHz 256KB Slot-1
>
> SECC2
>
>>>Do you know if these will simply drop in and use my existing memorey?
>>
>>If your existing memory is PC100 or PC133, yes - but if it's PC66, no.
>>
>>You could also drop in a 1.4Ghz Tualatin Celeron on a Slot-T adapter:
>>
>>http://strattoncomputer.com/slcoupadkitw.html
>>
>>That would be cheaper than the Slot-1 PIIIs, and offer better
>>performance. If your memory is PC133, get the 1.1Ghz upgrade kit and run
>>it at 133Mhz for even better price/performance.
>>
>>
>>>Thank you
>>>
>>>
>>>"JK" <(please reply to group, email invalid) junk@mail.dk> wrote in
>
> message
>
>>>news:t5kcg0dd6jedh7sjmlbt1g0jtmppeddt40@4ax.com...
>>>
>>>
>>>>On Mon, 26 Jul 2004 20:45:15 -0700, "emc2" <emc2_@hotmail.com> wrote:
>>>>
>>>>
>>>>
>>>>>sorry.it has the 1008.004 bios
>>>>>
>>>>
>>>>If you look in bios, you see it.
>>>>
>>>>The motherboard has BX chipset, and so it has just 2 agp dividers: 1
>>>>and 2/3.
>>>>
>>>>This is fine for fsb66 and fsb100.
>>>>
>>>>But for fsb133 you miss the agp divider 1/2. So at fsb133 the agp is
>>>>overclocked by 33%. This does not mean that you cannot run fsb133 or
>>>>faster. It just puts some demand on the agp graphics card used. Some
>>>>handle such overclocking fine.
>>>>
>>>>The bios contains fsb settings with either pci divider 1/3 and 1/4.
>>>>Choose the one with 1/4 when going to fsb133 or faster.
>>>>
>>>>I use the board myself.
>>>>
>>>>I run 12x124 with a celeron tualatin 1200. It can't do 12x133 (1600
>>>>MHz).
>>>>
>>>>best regards
>>>>
>>>>John
>>>>
>>>
>>>
>>>
>
>