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Subject: Re: Problems with Fritz caused by Microprocessor.

Author: Vincent Diepeveen

Date: 10:28:03 12/26/99

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On December 26, 1999 at 11:03:17, Christophe Theron wrote:

>On December 26, 1999 at 08:25:00, Ken Plesset wrote:
>
>>I had problems with Fritx 5.32 continuously crashing and tried everything I knew
>>of for 6 monthw. The chess base help line could not help me. Finally I got a
>>Microsoft Prefessional repairman to look at the computer. Eventually we swapped
>>out my AMD K6 microprocesser and replaced it with the same speed Pentium. After
>>that the program worked perfectly. AMD K6 is not exactly equivalent to the
>>Pentium. Hope this might help some people who are having problems with Frits.
>
>
>I have never had any problem with the K6. I'm using AMD processors since 1993. I
>used to have their 386dx40, K5-100 (equivalent to P200), K6-300 and now K6-450
>and I never had such problems.
>
>Maybe your microprocessor was broken somehow. Have you tried replacing it with
>another K6? It might have worked as well...
>
>I can report problems with the Pentiums as well. Problems very similar to the
>one you had.
>
>
>    Christophe

I've had major problems with my Pentium PRO 200 in the past when
i overclocked it a bit. Already overclocking to 240Mhz caused serious problems
at my ASUS motherboard, despite that there is a huge cooler on the processor
which is attached with special very poisenous stuff to bring cooling better
to the cpu.

It ran better at 233Mhz, but then i got com port trouble.

Even more trouble than this i had with all kind of cyrix processors in
the past. Not many software is supporting cyrix. Sometimes you have to
run special programs to slow down some things on the processor.

Cyrix is out of the picture though they recently announced a new processor:
Joshua. Let's see... ...cyrix never was fast for me, despite doing pretty
well at the integer testsets.

In all other cases that i had problems with processors it was not
the processor nor the overclocking, but the cooling that somehow
broke somewhere in the computer. Also computers that are not attached to
mother earth (earth-power) have serious problems as the leak power only
is getting higher and higher.

I had a case where there was 110 volts on the computers big tower...






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