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8IRXP and "OLD" reboot, BIOS problem
hey John,
Would 'cha believe my old faithful Matrox G400 dH just died in this board. Now I do have to "buy" something. ANYONE put a RADEON 9100 into the 8IRXP? Believe it fits the '1.5 voltage specs (right?) I'll post in a separate 'video' inquiry. Thanks. John said this: If you buy anything, I'd love to hear how you get on. From the Asus newsgroup posts, it sounds like a quality brand power supply with a high output is useful with these new 865/875 boards. "Doc" wrote in message ... My thoughts exactly. I had let the unopened GA board sit for too long. By the time I ran into these problems, I was 'really' ready for the 875/ PAT boards and CPUs... but I'm temped with what you say about the Asus board (I'd have to get better ram, running 2100 from Mushkin, nice but won't OC much...) I'll see, as we having a computer yard sale... ;^) Thanks. On 06/22/2003 3:47 PM, John said this: The Asus P4B533-E is an excellent board. I have my P4 1.8A overclocked to 2.7Ghz on this board using Corsair XMS 3200 CAS2 ram. The FSB is at 150mhz. Using the "undocumented" dipswitch, the RAM is running at 400mhz. I've also got the Lumberjacker bios installed, so the RAID controller has been "unlocked" to become the full version (not the Promise Lite). Having said all that, I enjoy having a good PC, so I'd love to get one of the new dual bank DDR boards. Based on what I've read on overclockers.com, I'd pay the extra and get a 875 board (instead of 865). There seems to be a lot of posts of people having issues with the Asus 865 and 875 boards at the moment, so I think it may be wise to sit back for a while. I haven't been following what's happening with the 865 and 875 Gigabyte boards, because after the 8IRXP problems I prefer to try a different company. Asus have a P4C800-E just hitting the shelves. It's a revised version of the P4C800, so I'm hoping it might have fewer issues than the P4C800 appears to have. With these new 865/875 boards it seems pretty easy to take any of the new hyperthreaded 800 FSB cpu's and push them to 3.2Ghz or more. Because you aren't in a hurry, you might like to wait until the end of the year. About then, Intel should have a new stepping of their P4 out. They are saying that the new stepping is likely to be overclockable to speeds approaching 4Ghz. Cya "Doc" wrote in message ... Hi John, I was contemplating a 'hardware' change, but figure to buy the 865 based boards/memory/800FSB CPU in another few months, so didn't update the GA board. However, I'm NOT sure that I'll use another GA board (865, etc.). You like the Asus P4B533-E? Thanks. On 06/21/2003 7:42 AM, John said this: Yes. It's definitely tough on the eyes trying to wire wrap those cpu pins. I had one of those big magnifying desklamp readers with a light, and it was still tough to see. Perhaps get someone younger to help you out. I slipped snipped for brevity Hi John, Right, saw the 'wirewrap' trick and I'd love to do it, even tried for about 1 hour, but at 53 my eyes (with the magnifying glass) could not do the trick... I hate the reboot problem and , as I've been tweaking this since installing a new HSink, I'm having to shut it off and then restart for each change instead of just rebooting. The F9 BIOS seems to really "HOLD" the memory timings to a strict number. I was OCed at 150 for a 1.6a - 2.4Ghz and was able (with F7) to run 2 -5 -2 -2 , now I can still get that OC, but the memory times are 2.5 -5 -3 -3 (crap!)... it is DDR2100 so (at 300 Memory speed) I shouldn't complain, but life isn't fun then! WISH I could see well enough to wrap this puppy! Thanks. On 06/11/2003 8:45 AM, John said this: It was never solved despite claims by Gigabyte that it was. The only solution is to set the voltage back to "AUTO" in the bios, and wrap a tiny piece of wire around the relevant cpu pins to achieve the desired voltage. "Doc" wrote in message ... Thanks... I'm at 1.65 I believe... so I'm still getting the hang on "restarts" , or sometimes a 'restart' will work but it drops the BIOS settings to a default and the Overclock doesn't remain (back to 1.6 then)... -- Rich "Doc" Colley mailto: -- Rich "Doc" Colley mailto: |
#2
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That's sad. I'd be interested to hear what you think of the 2D and TVout on the Radeon compared with the G400. Cya "Doc" wrote in message news:77USa.112014$N7.15693@sccrnsc03... hey John, Would 'cha believe my old faithful Matrox G400 dH just died in this board. Now I do have to "buy" something. ANYONE put a RADEON 9100 into the 8IRXP? Believe it fits the '1.5 voltage specs (right?) I'll post in a separate 'video' inquiry. Thanks. John said this: If you buy anything, I'd love to hear how you get on. From the Asus newsgroup posts, it sounds like a quality brand power supply with a high output is useful with these new 865/875 boards. "Doc" wrote in message ... My thoughts exactly. I had let the unopened GA board sit for too long. By the time I ran into these problems, I was 'really' ready for the 875/ PAT boards and CPUs... but I'm temped with what you say about the Asus board (I'd have to get better ram, running 2100 from Mushkin, nice but won't OC much...) I'll see, as we having a computer yard sale... ;^) Thanks. On 06/22/2003 3:47 PM, John said this: The Asus P4B533-E is an excellent board. I have my P4 1.8A overclocked to 2.7Ghz on this board using Corsair XMS 3200 CAS2 ram. The FSB is at 150mhz. Using the "undocumented" dipswitch, the RAM is running at 400mhz. I've also got the Lumberjacker bios installed, so the RAID controller has been "unlocked" to become the full version (not the Promise Lite). Having said all that, I enjoy having a good PC, so I'd love to get one of the new dual bank DDR boards. Based on what I've read on overclockers.com, I'd pay the extra and get a 875 board (instead of 865). There seems to be a lot of posts of people having issues with the Asus 865 and 875 boards at the moment, so I think it may be wise to sit back for a while. I haven't been following what's happening with the 865 and 875 Gigabyte boards, because after the 8IRXP problems I prefer to try a different company. Asus have a P4C800-E just hitting the shelves. It's a revised version of the P4C800, so I'm hoping it might have fewer issues than the P4C800 appears to have. With these new 865/875 boards it seems pretty easy to take any of the new hyperthreaded 800 FSB cpu's and push them to 3.2Ghz or more. Because you aren't in a hurry, you might like to wait until the end of the year. About then, Intel should have a new stepping of their P4 out. They are saying that the new stepping is likely to be overclockable to speeds approaching 4Ghz. Cya "Doc" wrote in message ... Hi John, I was contemplating a 'hardware' change, but figure to buy the 865 based boards/memory/800FSB CPU in another few months, so didn't update the GA board. However, I'm NOT sure that I'll use another GA board (865, etc.). You like the Asus P4B533-E? Thanks. On 06/21/2003 7:42 AM, John said this: Yes. It's definitely tough on the eyes trying to wire wrap those cpu pins. I had one of those big magnifying desklamp readers with a light, and it was still tough to see. Perhaps get someone younger to help you out. I slipped snipped for brevity Hi John, Right, saw the 'wirewrap' trick and I'd love to do it, even tried for about 1 hour, but at 53 my eyes (with the magnifying glass) could not do the trick... I hate the reboot problem and , as I've been tweaking this since installing a new HSink, I'm having to shut it off and then restart for each change instead of just rebooting. The F9 BIOS seems to really "HOLD" the memory timings to a strict number. I was OCed at 150 for a 1.6a - 2.4Ghz and was able (with F7) to run 2 -5 -2 -2 , now I can still get that OC, but the memory times are 2.5 -5 -3 -3 (crap!)... it is DDR2100 so (at 300 Memory speed) I shouldn't complain, but life isn't fun then! WISH I could see well enough to wrap this puppy! Thanks. On 06/11/2003 8:45 AM, John said this: It was never solved despite claims by Gigabyte that it was. The only solution is to set the voltage back to "AUTO" in the bios, and wrap a tiny piece of wire around the relevant cpu pins to achieve the desired voltage. "Doc" wrote in message ... Thanks... I'm at 1.65 I believe... so I'm still getting the hang on "restarts" , or sometimes a 'restart' will work but it drops the BIOS settings to a default and the Overclock doesn't remain (back to 1.6 then)... -- Rich "Doc" Colley mailto: -- Rich "Doc" Colley mailto: |
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