On 27 Jul 99, at 1:04, InThrees wrote:
> Every day I wake up, and find a semi-plausible reason not to order a new
> P-III or Celeron-366 chip, mb, and case.
>
> Soon there will come a day when I will have no reason, and I will do it.
>
> Anyway, if I get the Celeron, as cheap as they are, I want to overclock
> it. (and how.) Now I was somewhat-recently visiting a site on
> overclocking, and the proprietor had performed 'surgery' to remove the
> clock-multiplier lock. Is this really possible? I think if I could get it
> right in two tries on a Celeron chip (or two, hehehe) I would think of it
> as worth it.
>
> Does anyone have info on doing this? Horror stories? I'm not looking for
> someone to talk me out of it, if I can't find the info, I won't do it, I
> just want to know if/how it's done. : )
I know a lot of people with overclocked Celerons, and this doesn't sound
familiar to me.
You may be thinking of something like
http://www.cpu-central.com/dualceleron/index.html
Note that many of the "Slotket" riser cards, which allow you to install a
Socket370 Celeron in a Slot1 motherboard, incorporate this modification and
so no surgery is necessary.
[A good motherboard for overclocking Celerons will allow you to tweak the
voltage a little either side of 2.0v, and will offer a range of bus speeds
besides 66 and 100 MHz.]
David G
PCBUILD's List Owner's:
Bob Wright<[log in to unmask]>
Drew Dunn<[log in to unmask]>
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