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Type: Posts; User: Ice
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Yes, the best (and maybe the only) solution is teflon tape. Ordinary electric/duct tape is not very reliable - the glue will eventually damage the PCB.
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Hey Roy;
The Mendocino core is just the Deschutes core with on-die L2 cache, you know? That means that the cores are identical, excluding the L2 cache.
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Is my guess correct; your CPU is an old PII 300?
It does matter at least a tiny bit which one it is.
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I think we need to straighten things out a bit;
PII runs at 66MHz (233-333MHz) and 100MHz (350-450MHz) FSB. It's internal L2 cache (512kb) runs at 1/2 core speed.
PIII runs at 100MHz...
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The Pentium II also uses 0.25 micron manufacturing process from 333MHz and up.
most of the latest 350 items will make it to 450 without much hazzle.
Get a Celeron though. Much cheaper and usually...
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Also the ASUS P2V should support UDMA/66.
The 66MB/s transfer rate is only peak rates. Best sustained transfer rates for top notch IDE drives are in the region of 8-9MB/s. Under normal use don't...
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1. Yes
2. You could get into trouble by overclocking your PCI bus from 33MHz to 41,5MHz. Many videocards and harddrives can't cope with this. The TNT is specially picky about heat and overclocking...
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YOU f***** up your CPU, and made the store and Intel pay?
Pretty silly. It's people like you that will be to blame when Intel and others decide to make it ABSOLUTELY not possible to overclock...
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The PPro/PII CPU bus doesn't support external (onboard) L2 cache, hence there wouldn't be a way for the CPU to communicate with the extra cache.
If it was possible, don't you think you could buy...
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Notes to mr LiquidIQ:
....LS Cache Bus Speed 175 MHZ == fastest speed in MHZ your cache will run at, if you have a MB that will support 175Mhz, then you can run the cache at full speed....
The...
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