254574
Stosh
February 18th, 2000 08:03 AM
There are a lot of factors that go into overclocking. Cooling is #1
1. It depends upon your motherboard. Does it have a CPUSoft menu that allows you to change the FSB(Front Side Bus)
2. If you change the the FSB to some odd number, it will change your AGP bus, and your PCI bus. (Not necessarily a good thing)
Here is my system and my overclocking results
Abit BX6 2.0
Celeron 400
128mb PC100
V3-3K AGP
SBLive Value
WD 8.4gb HDD
I applied thermal paste between the processor and the heatsink, then attached a dual fan. I also added a case fan. I also added a slot fan cooler and placed it next to the V3
The FSB default is 66mhz. Intel chips are multiplier locked. Which means you cannot change the clock multiplier. I turned off the speed lock control. This allows me to change the FSB.
The Cel400 has a multiplier of 6. So with the default of 66mhz, 6x66=396(Or a 400mhz processor)
The AGP bus was set to 1 to 1 ratio, so it ran at 66mhz
The PCI bus was set to a 1/2 divider, so it ran at 33mhz (Which is standard for the PCI bus)
I changed front speed bus to 83mhz
Processor - 6x83=498 (500mhz)
AGP - 1 to 1 = 83mhz
PCI - 1/2 = 41.5mhz
The system booted fine, the problem I ran into was with my PCI network interface card. For whatever reason, I could not get files to move across my LAN. I figured it was probably the odd settings, (PCI-41.5mhz). I brought it back down to 75mhz FSB. Which gave me a PCI bus speed of 37.5mhz. It seemed fine at that speed.
Ideally, I would have liked to set the FSB an 100mhz, which would give me the following specs.
CPU - 6x100=600mhz
AGP - 100 at 2/3 = 66mhz
PCI - 100 at 1/3 - 33mhz
The problem was that I could not get the system to even post at that speed.
Good Luck, and be careful