"new" super 7 socket motherboards still in production?
I remember reading somewhere that (I'm thinking some asian company) is
still manufacturing boards for super 7 socket chips. They are new boards that max out the capabilities of these old chips. Support max RAM, highest FSB, etc. However, I can't find any info online. Any ideas? |
On Sat, 19 Feb 2005 21:14:35 GMT, theyak
wrote: In article 8feeee17c877fe46df91799b68df9804 , says... I remember reading somewhere that (I'm thinking some asian company) is still manufacturing boards for super 7 socket chips. They are new boards that max out the capabilities of these old chips. Support max RAM, highest FSB, etc. However, I can't find any info online. Any ideas? Since no socket 7 chips are being made I think it's safe to assume no boards are being made for them either. It would be foolish to buy a socket7 mb anyway. Amds are as low as 40 bucks. Upgrade. There are still legitimate uses for them, for example an industrial PC whose chassis is AT. I don't know where to find what the OP was asking for, though. |
"newbietuesday" wrote in message lkaboutcomputing.com... I remember reading somewhere that (I'm thinking some asian company) is still manufacturing boards for super 7 socket chips. They are new boards that max out the capabilities of these old chips. Support max RAM, highest FSB, etc. However, I can't find any info online. Any ideas? here is one link but they look expensive |
On Fri, 25 Feb 2005 15:20:53 -0500, "newbietuesday"
wrote: ..but those are not in production anymore either! Anyway, I still have an abundance of AMD-K6's and old DIMMs, and old video cards lying about. I hate to toss them, so I was going to make a testbench from a new mobo w/ decent BIOS, learn a thing or two about hardware tweaking. Mebe make a linux learning lab too... 500, 550 Mhz is perfect for a lot of simple applications, including surfing. :) What makes you think a socket 7 board would have any relevent "new" features or a decent bios? Mostly, if anything, they'd simply have new components which for most cases means nothing useful except those that age over time like the battery and capacitors. I'd also expect that they're premium priced... might be worthwhile to check a few local computer shops as they might have socket 7 boards practically free. (Super) Socket 7 was picky about things like AGP video cards though, whether it is a good testbed or likely to work well with other parts is subject to trial and error. If nothing else a web search should find old products, or there's always ebay. |
"newbietuesday" wrote in message lkaboutcomputing.com... ..but those are not in production anymore either! Anyway, I still have an abundance of AMD-K6's and old DIMMs, and old video cards lying about. I hate to toss them, so I was going to make a testbench from a new mobo w/ decent BIOS, learn a thing or two about hardware tweaking. Mebe make a linux learning lab too... 500, 550 Mhz is perfect for a lot of simple applications, including surfing. :) I'd steer clean of anything that;s PC Chips!!! that's about the only brand of mobo that i;ve had real problems with. however if you can pick up a super socket7 mobo cheap on ebay...go for it... over the last few years i bet i've taken at least 40 or more 386 and 486's and popped a super7 mobo in them and made quite useful machines...(most were amd-333 to 450's but i kept an amd-550 for myself which i built in an old gateway 486-33 tower) since i do a lot of parts trading... the average cost was about $3.00 each total using all surplus parts... i gave most of them away on freecycle but some of the people paid me a few dollars... so basically my "hobby" is costing me nothing |
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