akimmet wrote on 2024-07-27, 23:21:
These 3.3v AMD DX2 chips were a popular budget CPU. Almost as fast as an equivalent Intel CPU but less than half the price.
Once AMD moved to a smaller node size to make DX4 chips, it made sense to be able make DX2 chips with the same silicon.
It certainly does look more like a DX4 or Am5x86 than a DX2 (smaller golden lid on the back).
Are these 3v AMD DX2 like a nerfed DX4, or it's the same DX2 made with a smaller process?
I wonder, wouldn't it have been cheaper and easier (no need for a VRM) for Acer to buy a 5v part though? Were they still being made?
Horun wrote on 2024-07-28, 02:01:What motherboard do you have ?
The board is an A1G4, came in an AcerMate 466d. I restored the very poorly treated case a long time ago but never tested it much.
The onboard video simply doesn't work. I couldn't find an answer to that. Maybe some component got broken (capacitor, resistor, transistor, memory chip?) and that's why the previous owner (+20 yers ago) was using it with the trusty HMC ISA video card. It does make the 1 long beep and 3 short ones if the on-board video jumper is closed.
Horun wrote on 2024-07-28, 02:01:I have a Am486DE2-66V8TGC (a later model Am486DX2-66 3.3v) and works perfect on a ECS AL486 VLB board set as DX at 33Mhz and 3.3v.
Shouldn't it be working automatically at double the bus speed (33x2)? Does it support a 3x multiplier?
My only other AMD DX2 66 is a DXL2 version, from 94. It's a 5v part and looks like it's made with the older process.
I just found this thread and it seems like this CPU can probably do a big overclock. I'll try and see how it goes!
Am486DX2-66@123Mhz!