If you mean how to know if your chip is an overclocked one,
you can compare its appearance to others, ask Intel with the
serial number, measure ceramic thickness (classic Pentium),
etc. But the best is to overclock it: it should resist, if
original, one or two steps up of multiplier or bus
frequency, but depends on chip (PII resist more).
************************************
Javier Vizcaino. Ability Electronics. [log in to unmask]http://www.automodelismo.comhttp://ability53.hypermart.net
Starting point: (-1)^(-1) = -1
Applying logarithms: (-1)*ln(-1) = ln(-1)
Since ln(-1) <> 0, dividing: -1 = 1 (ln(-1) is
complex, but exists)
-----Mensaje original-----
De: Manas Mittal <[log in to unmask]>
Para: [log in to unmask]
<[log in to unmask]>
Fecha: jueves 5 de noviembre de 1998 18:40
Asunto: [PCBUILD] Jumper Setting
>Can anybody tell me a simple way to ensure that my chip has
not been over
>clocked.Should I fiddle with the jumper settings.I son't
have much Hardware
>experience
>
>Manas
>[log in to unmask]
>
> -----
> PCBUILD mailing list - http://nospin.com
> Bob Wright:[log in to unmask] - Drew
Dunn:[log in to unmask]
>
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