Author: Dave Gomboc
Date: 16:31:27 04/13/99
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On April 13, 1999 at 18:00:01, Eugene Nalimov wrote: >On April 13, 1999 at 15:52:28, Dave Gomboc wrote: > >>On April 13, 1999 at 11:16:36, Rajen Gupta wrote: >> >>>>> >>>>I have read that the 300 mhz Celeron is easy to overclock. >>>> >>>>bruce >>> very easy. 300 A can safely reach 450MHZ, 333 and 400's can in fact reach >>>500MHZ if you are lucky and some have even been lucky enough to get a 366 which >>>can reach 550. there are vendors who are selling dual celeron 500 for incredibly >>>dirt cheap prices. with NT one culd run a Fritz 5/32 eng vs eng match with >>>thinking on >>> >>>Rajen Gupta >> >>I have a BX mainboard (ASUS P2B-D). Is it possible to use two Celerons instead >>of two normal P-IIs? I was under the impression that they didn't support >>multi-processing. Can you provide some web page pointer or something (e.g. at >>tomshardware) that shows you can multi-process with them? Or is this just >>speculation on your part? >> >>Dave Gomboc > >http://kikumaru.w-w.ne.jp/pc/celeron/index_e.html WOW. That guy is nuts. Well, of course he isn't, he just knows what he's doing, but I'd be scared to try that! :-) Fortunately, it looks like there's some adapter cards from the socket Celerons to fit into the slot 1 mainboards, and newer versions of one of the models have a built-in "dual" jumper, way cool! no soldering, no fuss, nothing. just massive speed :-O :-) And the best adapter allows both dual processor and overclocking. Fantastic! Thanks! Dave Gomboc (seeing how much money he can dig up :-)
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