FYI: it wouldnt boot at 600 Mhz

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Flash the BIOS with either a new version or an upgraded verison. That should give you the freedom you want. You should be able to get BIOS upgrades or new BIOS off the motherboard manufacture's site.Joes2Silly wrote:Okay, my friend dumped this pentium 3 on me awhile back.... So I installed linux (I dont have a 98 installer CD, If you do contact me) and I started to overclock it. Sadly I only raised it from 450 Mhz to 504 Mhz. So besides buying a new motherboard for it, how can I raise the clock to a higher speed?
FYI: it wouldnt boot at 600 Mhz
vskid wrote:Nerd = likes school, does all their homework, dies if they don't get 100% on every assignment
Geek = likes technology, dies if the power goes out and his UPS dies too
I am a geek.
550MHz was roughly as high as most Super 7 processors were labeled. I've never heard of a 600 MHz one, though it is possible. Super 7s tend to be in the range of 266 to 550, and normal Socket 7s tend to be 133 (75 if you want to be technical) to 233, or a bit higher.timmeh87 wrote:what was the original speed of that super 7... 550?
I didn't say all processors were stuck in the 10-15% range. Sometimes you can squeeze out more, especially when you get a chip that is a newer core design which has a higher maximum theoretical speed...as long as the chip isn't so new it does not lack a refined design.sam fisher wrote:I've had a 600mhz P3 easily go to 800mhz. That's a 33% increase.