while sorting out my stockpile of computer parts i happen to find a bp6 motherboard.
now my question is, what is the fastest cpu i can drop onto the board. I'm after smp because i want to play around with some sever os (windows and linux)
cheers
wow found a gem
well, I have one PIII-S running at the moment no top of two adapter without any mods.
after some resoldering and caps changing for stability, i am sure will be able to run both of them for the moment BIOS recognizes both but it is not anything stable in SMP.
Depends how much you want from it and how much you are willing to spend on it.
Yes there is QUITE improvement when running those with 512Kb cache
you may put PIII coppermines with 256kb cache but they are more difficult to find and you would have to solder anyway
after some resoldering and caps changing for stability, i am sure will be able to run both of them for the moment BIOS recognizes both but it is not anything stable in SMP.
Depends how much you want from it and how much you are willing to spend on it.
Yes there is QUITE improvement when running those with 512Kb cache
you may put PIII coppermines with 256kb cache but they are more difficult to find and you would have to solder anyway
Dual C366@550MHz 1.90V (History)
yet single PIII-S 512Kb L2 cache at 1400MHz@700MHz
BP6 (not modded yet)
256MB PC133 C2
GF4Ti4200-8x
Maxtor 2x60Gb - all on promise ATA133
Lite-On LTR 40125S@48125W!!!
Plus P4 system
yet single PIII-S 512Kb L2 cache at 1400MHz@700MHz
BP6 (not modded yet)
256MB PC133 C2
GF4Ti4200-8x
Maxtor 2x60Gb - all on promise ATA133
Lite-On LTR 40125S@48125W!!!
Plus P4 system
Doing the mod for P-III is purely up to your attitude for doing it. Do you climb mountains "because they are there" or are you more into looking at the cost vs return aspect.
If you have soldering skills the mods are pretty cheap and not to difficult. If you have to pay someone else to do it, it would be more cost effective to get a board designed for P-III cpus.
By the way,
welcome to BP6.com
If you have soldering skills the mods are pretty cheap and not to difficult. If you have to pay someone else to do it, it would be more cost effective to get a board designed for P-III cpus.
By the way,
welcome to BP6.com
There are *almost* no bad BP6s. There are mostly bad caps.
No BP6s remaining
Athlon 2800
Sempron 2000
ViaCPU laptop with Vista.(Works great after bumping ram to 2Gig)
P-III 850@100
No BP6s remaining
Athlon 2800
Sempron 2000
ViaCPU laptop with Vista.(Works great after bumping ram to 2Gig)
P-III 850@100
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the fastest dual would be to get some 366 and OC them to 550, some people have used oced 400 with some success. those would probility be the fastest and easiest way to SMP
athlon mp systems are just pimp beyond belief, a little harder to OC and they're usually more expensive because the boards are server boards (some are harder to OC than others) and some require ecc enabled ram stick. if you're up to the task you can also use XP chips and just connect the L3 bridges(I think) and trick the board into thinking that they're MP processors.
athlon mp systems are just pimp beyond belief, a little harder to OC and they're usually more expensive because the boards are server boards (some are harder to OC than others) and some require ecc enabled ram stick. if you're up to the task you can also use XP chips and just connect the L3 bridges(I think) and trick the board into thinking that they're MP processors.
yea, back from the dead
If it ain't broken, mod it until it is
If it ain't broken, mod it until it is
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- Joined: Thu Mar 27, 2003 10:29 am
- Location: Denver
Yup, the L5 mod is golden. My current desktop system is a pair of 2200+XP's on an MSI K7D Master oc'd to 145FSB.Holodeck2 wrote:the fastest dual would be to get some 366 and OC them to 550, some people have used oced 400 with some success. those would probility be the fastest and easiest way to SMP
athlon mp systems are just pimp beyond belief, a little harder to OC and they're usually more expensive because the boards are server boards (some are harder to OC than others) and some require ecc enabled ram stick. if you're up to the task you can also use XP chips and just connect the L3 bridges(I think) and trick the board into thinking that they're MP processors.
I firmly believe the release of the MP chipset was the first nail in the coffin of the Abit BP6.
right now I have a dead system sitting on my bed....a bp6 I bought originally with a pair of 366's certified to OC to 550. I only ever got them to run stable at 539.... a couple of the caps on the system look like balloons so I'm waiting to hear back about getting a new set. I'd love to resurrect this baby for a cluster I'm building...two dual P3-600's are waiting for this one to come play with them.