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#11
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WTB: Athlon 1400+ CPU
On Tue, 22 Nov 2005 22:17:25 -0800, VaVoom wrote:
Wes Newell wrote: You'll find idiots quoting the Asus website, You're the guy that recently told us "Personally, I use Dot 3 brake fluid" to lube fan bearings. Brake fluid embrittles many plastics. Maybe you keep a scatter shield around your fans to contain flying blades? Yeah, but I don't coat the friggin blades with it.:-) I'm also the guy that is now using 30 year old wheel bearing grease as a thermal compound on my A64 machine. I'm also the guy that went ahead and put an Athlon XP in the first generation Socket A MB (KT7-Raid, with KT133 chipset) even though Abit and everyone else said it wouldn't work. I knew they were full of crap then, and things haven't changed. I'm also the guy that clocked the system clock to 233MHz on first generation A64 MB's when all the so called experts said it couldn't be done. That took all of about 1 minute. To be honest, I can't remember how many times a company has told me this or that couldn't be done only to prove them wrong. And I mean their own product. And I garauntee you I can put any socket A CPU into the A7V133 MB (KT133A chipset) and make it work. And the same thing can be done with the original A7V (KT133 chipset). -- KT133 MB, CPU @2400MHz (24x100): SIS755 MB CPU @2330MHz (10x233) Need good help? Provide all system info with question. My server http://wesnewell.no-ip.com/cpu.php Verizon server http://mysite.verizon.net/res0exft/cpu.htm |
#12
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WTB: Athlon 1400+ CPU
On Wed, 23 Nov 2005 05:05:32 -0700, Adiabatic wrote:
On Fri, 18 Nov 2005 21:21:41 -0600, Paul wrote: I'm looking to get a little more performance out of an older system. I'm looking to buy an AMD Athlon 1400 - A1400AMS3C. Are there good places to buy something like this? I see a couple on eBay, but was wondering if there were other options. Thank you. Paul Don't listen to anyone's claims unless they themselves have actually done it. I used to have the asus a7v 133 1.05 and I didn't try anything faster than a 1400, so I can't tell you. If you guys would just do a web search or two, you'll find people running all kinds of cpu's in boards that are said not to support them. Here's just a sample. Results 1 - 10 of about 549 for a7v133 1.05 2400 - 0.26 sec. Cainfoo 03-29-04 10:48 PM 2400+ on A7V133 Currently I have an A7V133 Rev 1.04, Actually its my wifes computer, running a XP 2400+ thoroughbred B with no modifications at all.The only thing I had to do was manually set the Vcore to 1.65 because the board in auto was setting it at 1.5. The clock is currently set at 142 MHz@15 for a processor speed of 2130. I am using the stock AMD cooling fan and it reaches a max temp of 115 F running prime 95. Asus says it will only run up to 2100 Palomino But so far I have run a Thunderbird 1.13 Gig. 266 FSB, a 2100+ Palomino, a 2100+ Thoroughbred a, and now the 2400+ Thoroughbred B. It is pretty funny, my wifes A7V133 is now running at a faster processor speed than my A7V333 with a 2600+ Barton. But mine still out performs it due to DDR ram and the additional L2 cache. But any way the board has more capabitities than what Asus leads us to believe. Just one more, with a Barton core... tufter 05-18-2004 04:53 PM Barton 2500+ works in Asus A7V 133 I have a mobile barton running at 2.6 Ghz in an A7V133 v1.04. Fantastic chip - needs the wire trick with an A7V. http://www.ocforums.com/showthread.php?threadid=279392 note: The wire trick he's talking about is setting the 5th (8x) multiplier bit (pin AJ27) high. There's many ways to do this depending on ones needs. -- KT133 MB, CPU @2400MHz (24x100): SIS755 MB CPU @2330MHz (10x233) Need good help? Provide all system info with question. My server http://wesnewell.no-ip.com/cpu.php Verizon server http://mysite.verizon.net/res0exft/cpu.htm |
#13
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WTB: Athlon 1400+ CPU
Wes Newell wrote:
On Wed, 23 Nov 2005 05:05:32 -0700, Adiabatic wrote: On Fri, 18 Nov 2005 21:21:41 -0600, Paul wrote: I'm looking to get a little more performance out of an older system. I'm looking to buy an AMD Athlon 1400 - A1400AMS3C. Are there good places to buy something like this? I see a couple on eBay, but was wondering if there were other options. Thank you. Paul Don't listen to anyone's claims unless they themselves have actually done it. I used to have the asus a7v 133 1.05 and I didn't try anything faster than a 1400, so I can't tell you. If you guys would just do a web search or two, you'll find people running all kinds of cpu's in boards that are said not to support them. Here's just a sample. I did a search! I found this: ---- In my opinion this compatibility or incompatibility comes from the fact that between Athlon and AthlonXP the specification for the processor bus has been changed. As far as I know for AthlonXP so called "L-C-L" Filters are needed, which are NOT implemented on older mainboards. Without these filters it depends on how the production tolerances of CPU, Chipset, Mainboard etc. affect each other. Either it does simply not boot, it works unstably, or it works perfectly. Noone can tell you if your combination will work - even if others have had success with a certain combination, it might or might not work for you. So only try using AthlonXPs on mainboards that are 100% fit for the purpose (see tables and links below). If you want to try on a not officially compatible board, than be prepared to run into trouble. ---- Don't forget the OP said "I don't want to buy something that may or may not work or is going to be a hassle. |
#14
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WTB: Athlon 1400+ CPU
Wes Newell wrote:
On Tue, 22 Nov 2005 22:17:25 -0800, VaVoom wrote: Wes Newell wrote: You'll find idiots quoting the Asus website, You're the guy that recently told us "Personally, I use Dot 3 brake fluid" to lube fan bearings. Brake fluid embrittles many plastics. Maybe you keep a scatter shield around your fans to contain flying blades? Yeah, but I don't coat the friggin blades with it.:-) Silly. Brake fluid gets spilled, it migrates, droplets get flung when parts spin at thousands of rpm... |
#15
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WTB: Athlon 1400+ CPU
On Wed, 23 Nov 2005 15:09:55 -0800, VaVoom wrote:
Wes Newell wrote: On Tue, 22 Nov 2005 22:17:25 -0800, VaVoom wrote: Wes Newell wrote: You'll find idiots quoting the Asus website, You're the guy that recently told us "Personally, I use Dot 3 brake fluid" to lube fan bearings. Brake fluid embrittles many plastics. Maybe you keep a scatter shield around your fans to contain flying blades? Yeah, but I don't coat the friggin blades with it.:-) Silly. Brake fluid gets spilled, it migrates, droplets get flung when parts spin at thousands of rpm... OK, let me put it this way then. I've been using it for years and have never had anything break. I do of course only put in 1 samll drop, so it doesn't get flung out either. At least not in any noticable amount. And if it's so bad for plastic, why is it that the reservoirs for brake fluid on almost all cars are made of plastic. I really kind of doubt that it has any affect, other wise it wouldn't be used on what's considered the most critical safety feature of the casr, the brakes. -- KT133 MB, CPU @2400MHz (24x100): SIS755 MB CPU @2330MHz (10x233) Need good help? Provide all system info with question. My server http://wesnewell.no-ip.com/cpu.php Verizon server http://mysite.verizon.net/res0exft/cpu.htm |
#16
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WTB: Athlon 1400+ CPU
Wes Newell wrote:
On Wed, 23 Nov 2005 15:09:55 -0800, VaVoom wrote: Wes Newell wrote: On Tue, 22 Nov 2005 22:17:25 -0800, VaVoom wrote: Wes Newell wrote: You'll find idiots quoting the Asus website, You're the guy that recently told us "Personally, I use Dot 3 brake fluid" to lube fan bearings. Brake fluid embrittles many plastics. Maybe you keep a scatter shield around your fans to contain flying blades? Yeah, but I don't coat the friggin blades with it.:-) Silly. Brake fluid gets spilled, it migrates, droplets get flung when parts spin at thousands of rpm... OK, let me put it this way then. I've been using it for years and have never had anything break. I do of course only put in 1 samll drop, so it doesn't get flung out either. At least not in any noticable amount. And if it's so bad for plastic, why is it that the reservoirs for brake fluid on almost all cars are made of plastic. I really kind of doubt that it has any affect, other wise it wouldn't be used on what's considered the most critical safety feature of the casr, the brakes. My black plastic fans, and the shrouds around them, are hard. I snipped little bits off an old one with some aviation snips, and the chunks cracked away and went zinging across the room. My white plastic brake fluid reservoir appears to be more pliant, but I haven't snipped away at it. My guess is that there are *TWO* kinds of plastic. Maybe even more! I worked at a Suzuki shop for a while. When front brake work was done on a customer's bike, sometimes a little brake fluid would get spilled on a plastic front fender. When that happened, the bike automatically got a new fender. Brake fluid lifts paint. Spill some on your car. Spill some on your motherboard, spill some on the IDE cable sockets, slop it around for years and then report back to us. |
#17
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WTB: Athlon 1400+ CPU
On Wed, 23 Nov 2005 21:51:00 -0800, VaVoom wrote:
My guess is that there are *TWO* kinds of plastic. Maybe even more! Try thousands. Probably rated by it's hardnest. Any serious fisherman has probably made their on plastic worms on the kitchen stove. I have. I worked at a Suzuki shop for a while. When front brake work was done on a customer's bike, sometimes a little brake fluid would get spilled on a plastic front fender. When that happened, the bike automatically got a new fender. Never had a plastic fender on my bikes that I recall. But haven't owned one since the early 70's. Brake fluid lifts paint. Spill some on your car. Spill some on your motherboard, spill some on the IDE cable sockets, slop it around for years and then report back to us. Well, I've slopped it around cars for closer to 50 years than 40. That long enough? I've got a can of it that's at least 30 years old and the paint of the can is still there. Any unlike material that comes in contact has some affect on each other. Bolt an aluminum part on to a steal part and corrosion will be increased at that point. Corrosion control course circa 1964. The thing is with the fans is that they will long be trash before any noticable amount of damage would occur from any petrolium products coming into contact with them. And the final point is that one shouldn't over apply ANY type oil the the fan bearings as they will all deteriorate the plastic to some degree. But not enough to worry about by a long shot. -- KT133 MB, CPU @2400MHz (24x100): SIS755 MB CPU @2330MHz (10x233) Need good help? Provide all system info with question. My server http://wesnewell.no-ip.com/cpu.php Verizon server http://mysite.verizon.net/res0exft/cpu.htm |
#18
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WTB: Athlon 1400+ CPU
Wes Newell wrote:
On Wed, 23 Nov 2005 21:51:00 -0800, VaVoom wrote: My guess is that there are *TWO* kinds of plastic. Maybe even more! Try thousands. Probably rated by it's hardnest. Any serious fisherman has probably made their on plastic worms on the kitchen stove. I have. I worked at a Suzuki shop for a while. When front brake work was done on a customer's bike, sometimes a little brake fluid would get spilled on a plastic front fender. When that happened, the bike automatically got a new fender. Never had a plastic fender on my bikes that I recall. But haven't owned one since the early 70's. Brake fluid lifts paint. Spill some on your car. Spill some on your motherboard, spill some on the IDE cable sockets, slop it around for years and then report back to us. Well, I've slopped it around cars for closer to 50 years than 40. That long enough? I've got a can of it that's at least 30 years old and the paint of the can is still there. Any unlike material that comes in contact has some affect on each other. Bolt an aluminum part on to a steal part and corrosion will be increased at that point. Corrosion control course circa 1964. The thing is with the fans is that they will long be trash before any noticable amount of damage would occur from any petrolium products coming into contact with them. And the final point is that one shouldn't over apply ANY type oil the the fan bearings as they will all deteriorate the plastic to some degree. But not enough to worry about by a long shot. Then you are right, Paul should get an XP-Mobile 2600+ Barton processor for his board. |
#19
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WTB: Athlon 1400+ CPU
"" wrote:
Wes, thanks for the reply. I have an ASUS A7V133 MB version 1.05 (no ending dot). According to the ASUS website, this version of the MB won't take anything faster than the 1400. I'm not saying it's impossible, but I don't want to buy something that may or may not work or is going to be a hassle. I was hoping to find a site somewhere on the internet to find things like this for sale, but so far I haven't found much. Wes Newell wrote: On Fri, 18 Nov 2005 21:21:41 -0600, Paul wrote: I'm looking to get a little more performance out of an older system. I'm looking to buy an AMD Athlon 1400 - A1400AMS3C. Are there good places to buy something like this? I see a couple on eBay, but was wondering if there were other options. Thank you. What MB (make/model)? As long as you know what you're doing (or can get someone to help you that does) you can install almost any K7 cpu in any K7 MB and make it work. One thing I will tell you. The old tbird 1400 isn't anywhere close to your best option. See link below you may find an acceptable answer to xp/t-breds he http://forums.pcper.com/showthread.p...light=A7V 133 ud -- Posted using the http://www.hardwareforumz.com interface, at author's request Articles individually checked for conformance to usenet standards Topic URL: http://www.hardwareforumz.com/Athlon...pict65298.html Visit Topic URL to contact author (reg. req'd). Report abuse: http://www.hardwareforumz.com/eform.php?p=327991 |
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