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All right! But that answer leads me to other questions.
There are motherboards that allows you manually to select the system bus,
cpu clock, voltage, etc.
I´ve heard many times about multiplier locking in Intel CPUs.
So. The CPU clock is internally genarate?, or it comes to a pin and then is
multiplied inside the CPU?
Even when the CPU runs at the right frequency, if the mobo detects a PIII
coppermine, that works at 1.65 volts, is the celeron being overloaded with
0.15 volts more (think it should run at 1.5 volts)
>
> All current CPU's from Intel are multiplier locked. Long gone are the days
> where you could buy a slower labeled CPU and push it faster by increasing
the
> multiplier. In other words, no matter what you set the multiplier for
> on the external pins of the CPU, it ignores them, and runs at the
multiplier
> that was programmed inside, no matter what.
>
> That is why, even though your BIOS does not support higher multipliers, it
> still is running at 600Mhz. It is being recognized as a Pentium III
because
> Celeron's 533a and faster are based on the P-III core.
>
> The rated clock you should use is 66Mhz, it will likely run faster though.
>
> Note that all of these new Celeron's (dubbed Celeron II) are disabled for
SMP,
> they will NOT run in multi-processor systems even though based on the
P-III
> core.
>
> Russ Poffenberger Engineering Specialist
> Schlumberger Technologies ATE DOMAIN: [log in to unmask]
> 150 Baytech Drive
> San Jose, Ca. 95134 Voice: (408)586-6718 FAX: (408)586-4675
>
PCBUILD's List Owner's:
Bob Wright<[log in to unmask]>
Drew Dunn<[log in to unmask]>
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