VOGONS


First post, by arncht

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hi,

i know about 3 editions of the dx2-66:
* naked, as oem cpu
* overdrive as retail cpu (boxed)
* blue heat sink version? where they use it? what was the reason of this edition?

i did not find any info about it. originally i thought this cpu was the retail, but from the newspapers looks the overdrive was it.

My little retro computer world
Overdoze of the demoscene

Reply 1 of 16, by brostenen

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I have seen tons of different coloured heatsinks on 486's. I had a gold/copper-coloured one on a 486-dx2-66 in an IBM at some point.
The glued on heatsinks, just came in whatever colour, the maker of a given machine chose to use. Basically it is just a standard CPU.

Don't eat stuff off a 15 year old never cleaned cpu cooler.
Those cakes make you sick....

My blog: http://to9xct.blogspot.dk
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Reply 2 of 16, by derSammler

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The attachment unnamed.jpg is no longer available

I'm pretty sure that's the color of the standard heatsink of the non-Overdrive version.

Reply 3 of 16, by AlessandroB

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brostenen wrote on 2020-03-14, 11:49:

I have seen tons of different coloured heatsinks on 486's. I had a gold/copper-coloured one on a 486-dx2-66 in an IBM at some point.
The glued on heatsinks, just came in whatever colour, the maker of a given machine chose to use. Basically it is just a standard CPU.

I think he intend CPU stock directly from intel, not modify one by the PC builder.

Reply 4 of 16, by brostenen

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AlessandroB wrote on 2020-03-14, 13:21:
brostenen wrote on 2020-03-14, 11:49:

I have seen tons of different coloured heatsinks on 486's. I had a gold/copper-coloured one on a 486-dx2-66 in an IBM at some point.
The glued on heatsinks, just came in whatever colour, the maker of a given machine chose to use. Basically it is just a standard CPU.

I think he intend CPU stock directly from intel, not modify one by the PC builder.

Ahhhh. I see. Well. In that case, I have no idea on what different colours Intel used for heatsinks that they sold preinstalled on their product's.

Don't eat stuff off a 15 year old never cleaned cpu cooler.
Those cakes make you sick....

My blog: http://to9xct.blogspot.dk
My YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/user/brostenen

001100 010010 011110 100001 101101 110011

Reply 5 of 16, by arncht

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brostenen wrote on 2020-03-14, 11:49:

I have seen tons of different coloured heatsinks on 486's. I had a gold/copper-coloured one on a 486-dx2-66 in an IBM at some point.
The glued on heatsinks, just came in whatever colour, the maker of a given machine chose to use. Basically it is just a standard CPU.

these are the intel official heat sinks (the blue and the overdrive). the question: was the blue sink version an oem or a retail product?

My little retro computer world
Overdoze of the demoscene

Reply 7 of 16, by Intel486dx33

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DELL use to use Blue Heat sinks too.

Reply 9 of 16, by derSammler

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No, that's the normal retail boxed release. OEM had no heatsink at all.

Reply 13 of 16, by BitWrangler

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I've seen them, but last one I saw in the wild was about 345 moons ago.

Unicorn herding operations are proceeding, but all the totes of hens teeth and barrels of rocking horse poop give them plenty of hiding spots.

Reply 14 of 16, by BetaC

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Yeah, it's probably best to look at motherboards if you want to find one, at least on Ebay. I got lucky and found mine attached to a board.

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Reply 15 of 16, by waterbeesje

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I've got one, it was found in a dead HP Vectra ISA only system.
It's a regular DX2-66, blue sink glued with all the Intel printings on it. To me it seems like an Intel product, not glued by hp.

Stuck at 10MHz...

Reply 16 of 16, by BitWrangler

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Yah that's the time period I'd peg them for, first 2 or 3 years of DX2 existence, when they were high high end, and before VLB had much market penetration. Probably why they're not real common, volume would have been quite low compared to when the masses got DX2s.

Unicorn herding operations are proceeding, but all the totes of hens teeth and barrels of rocking horse poop give them plenty of hiding spots.