AlienWeird wrote on 2024-09-21, 16:03:[...] […]
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crap, you're right, it's a VIA chipset... although it doesn't have integrated graphics
welp
suppose it's time to cut my losses and dump the entire thing (I'm only partially sarcastic)
Via boards have a bad rep because their memory performance was quite a bit slower than contemporary Intel chipsets - and because people too often managed to mess up installation of chipset drives (install your 4-in-1 driver FIRST THING after installation of OS, before VGA, and you should be fine). Yes, a P3-500 with ApolloPro+ chipset will probably perform comparably to a P3-450 on an Intel i440BX, but in this era of Core i9s and Ryzens, that difference is negiligible.
More concerning is that the quality of motherboards with early Via P2/P3 chipsets tended to be subpar. Could you try to ID the specific board you have? So370 and Slot 1 reeks of PC-Chips, although even top-line brands like Tyan had a few boards like that.
AlienWeird wrote on 2024-09-21, 16:17:
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I do want to go faster, though. And I'm assuming the Voodoo 3 is going to start being a bottleneck the further away from 500MHz I move.
From the looks of it, I should be able to get all the way up to an 800MHz Pentium 3 in Slot 1 (apparently the socket in this one is reserved only for Celerons...)
Not so fast... there's a big rabbit hole to dive down when it comes to Slot 1 / So370 compatibility.
Your P3-500 is probably a 'Katmai' P3 which runs at max 1.8V. P3-800 CPUs will be 'Coppermine' which run at max 1.75V. Early P2/P3 boards can't supply lower than 1.8V so won't be able to run a Coppermine CPU without some tomfoolery (and more stress to the voltage regulators on the board than many a PC-Chips board can handle).
As for So370 - there are three versions of So370: PPGA, FC-PGA and FC-PGA2. If something is 'Celeron only' that means it has the PPGA pinout, as the only CPU released for PPGA was the 'Mendocino' Celeron. Later (>533MHz) Celerons are FC-PGA too and won't work on this either. FC-PGA was used for 'Coppermine' CPUs and FC-PGA2 for the very last 'Tualatin' So370 CPUs >1GHz. Aside from pinout, the same voltage constraints apply as with the slot. There are interposers to convert from PPGA->FC-PGA->FC=PGA2, but they are a lot rarer than Slocket adapters to use a socket 370 CPU in a Slot 1.
But before listing every possible corner case, let's ID that board so we know what we are talking about and what options you have.
Btw the 600MB RAM makes no sense at all. It's common that DIMMs are only recognized at half size (again, lots of theory, but exact situation depends on your board), but that would lead to 2x 256MB and 1x 128MB = 640MB total. Integrated VGA (which you say you don't have) could take a two-power out of that, i.e. 4, 8 16 or 32MB. So 608MB I would have understood. But 600MB doesn't make any sense. I suspect your board has a BIOS which simply hasn't been programmed to deal with this amount of RAM. I'd check with a software tool to see how much RAM it detects.