Reply 81 of 94, by Carlos S. M.
Got 4 Pentium 4 CPUs from scrap PCs
+ Pentium 4 HT 2.6 Ghz Northwood s478, SL6WS
+ Pentium 4 HT 3.2 Ghz Northwood s478, SL6WG
+ Pentium 4 531 Prescott LGA 775, SL8HZ
+ Pentium 4 650 Prescott LGA 775, SL7Z7
Reply 82 of 94, by ODwilly
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- l33t
I have a total of 4 socket 478 3.06/256/533 Celerons. For some reason this cpu was really popular in OEMs around my area. None in use right now, but probably have 20 or so scattered around. Ranging from the 1.3 to the 3.8ghz chips.
Main pc: Asus ROG 17. R9 5900HX, RTX 3070m, 16gb ddr4 3200, 1tb NVME.
Retro PC: Soyo P4S Dragon, 3gb ddr 266, 120gb Maxtor, Geforce Fx 5950 Ultra, SB Live! 5.1
Reply 83 of 94, by sprcorreia
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wrote:I have a total of 4 socket 478 3.06/256/533 Celerons. For some reason this cpu was really popular in OEMs around my area. None in use right now, but probably have 20 or so scattered around. Ranging from the 1.3 to the 3.8ghz chips.
3.8GHz 478 cpu? Can you share a photo of it?
Reply 84 of 94, by ODwilly
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- l33t
Lol sorry should have been clear, 3.8 is a lga 775 p4. 1.3ghz is 423 but I do have a 1.4ghz 478 chip. The slowest performance wise I think would be a 1.7/128/400 Celeron. Cant imagine running xp with 128mb of ram + intel extreme graphics and that cpu. Fastest 478 chip I had was a 3.4 Prescott
Main pc: Asus ROG 17. R9 5900HX, RTX 3070m, 16gb ddr4 3200, 1tb NVME.
Retro PC: Soyo P4S Dragon, 3gb ddr 266, 120gb Maxtor, Geforce Fx 5950 Ultra, SB Live! 5.1
Reply 85 of 94, by Carlos S. M.
Got 3 P4s more frm scrap PCs:
+ Pentium 4 1.8A Ghz Northwood s478, SL680
+ Pentium 4 HT 2.8C Ghz Northwood s478, SL6WT
+ Pentium 4 HT 3.2E Ghz Prescott s478, SL7B8
Reply 86 of 94, by Carlos S. M.
Can't stop getting P4 based PCs 🤣, got another 3.0 Ghz s478 Prescott from a trash PC, aparently the PC was trashed just because it couldn't POST due to a BIOS misconfiguration, reseting the CMOS fixed the issue
+ Pentium 4 3.0 Ghz Prescott s478, SL7KB
Reply 87 of 94, by Radical Vision
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- Oldbie
I have only x3 P4
Pentium IV - 2600MHz
Pentium IV - 2800Mhz
Pentium IV - 3000MHz (this one can be recognised only on post screen, on some software, as the CPU cap is scratched all over from some moron before me)
Soon i will have one of the best Pentium IV 3.2GHz i will use it on my 478 build with this
I did think before to use this board
But i ended up selling that board, after all im not so interested in 478 as platform, but that Intel board will be better.
No matter i don`t have much 478 processor (seems i have about 4-5 Celeron 478...) i have like 20 PGA 370 processors, coppermines, tualatins....
Why there is no thread about K7 462 AthlonXP processors ?
Mah systems retro, old, newer (Radical stuff)
W3680 4.5/ GA-x58 UD7/ R9 280x
K7 2.6/ NF7-S/ HD3850
IBM x2 P3 933/ GA-6VXD7/ Voodoo V 5.5K
Cmq P2 450/ GA-BX2000/ V2 SLI
IBM PC365
Cmq DeskPRO 486/33
IBM PS/2 Model 56
SPS IntelleXT 8088
Reply 88 of 94, by lordmogul
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- Newbie
There is another one nobody seems to notice:
Pentium 4 505J
- 2.66 GHz (20x 133 FSB (533 QDR))
- Prescott E0 (SL85U)
- 1 MiB L1 $
- 84 W TDP, 67.7°C Tcase
- EMT64, NX-bit, Intel VT
Why go for the fastest Pentium 4 for a socket, if you can go with the slowest one. (This in fact came from a prebuilt system) Only some Celerons should be slower than this for an LGA775 setup.
Besides that I got only one other in my collection:
Pentium 4 HT 631
- 3.0 GHz (15x 200 FSB (800 QDR))
- Cedar Mill C1 (SL96L)
- 2 MiB L2$
- 86W TDP, 69.2°C TCase
- HT, EMT64, NX-bit, EIST
Which I had running through a series of benchmarks against the one next to it, to see how much Conroe really improved against NetBurst:
Celeron 440
[list][*]2.0 GHz (10x200 FSB (800QDR))
[*]Conroe-L A1 8SL9XL)
[*]512 kiB L2$
[*]35W TDP, 60.4°C
[*]EMT64, NX-Bit[/list][/i]
P3 933EB @1035 (7x148) | CUSL2-C | GF3Ti200 | 256M PC133cl3 @148cl3 | 98SE & XP Pro SP3
X5460 @4.1 (9x456) | P35-DS3R | GTX660Ti | 8G DDR2-800cl5 @912cl6 | XP Pro SP3 & 7 SP1
3570K @4.4 GHz | Z77-D3H | GTX1060 | 16G DDR3-1600cl9 @2133cl12 | 7 SP1
Reply 89 of 94, by alvaro84
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Socket 423: Intel Pentium 4 1.3 GHz, 1.4 GHz, 1.5 GHz, 1.6 GHz, 1.7 GHz, 1.8 GHz, 2.0 GHz
Yeah, the 1.9 GHz model is still missing.
Socket 478 / Willamette: Celeron 1.7 GHz, 1.8 GHz; Pentium 4 1.4, 1.5, 1.6, 1.7, 1.8, 1.9, 2.0 GHz
There may be other Celerons but these what I could find in the wild.
Socket 478 / Northwood: Celeron 1.6, 1.8, 2.0, 2.1, 2.2, 2.3, 2.4, 2.5, 2.6, 2.7, 2.8 GHz; Pentium 4 1.6A, 1.8A, 2A, 2.2/400, 2.26/533, 2.4/400, 2.4/533,
2.4/800HT, 2.5/400, 2.53/533, 2.6/400, 2.6/800HT, 2.66/533, 2.8/400, 2.8/533, 2.8/800HT, 3.0/800HT, 3.06/533HT, 3.2/800HT.
Socket 478 / Prescott: Celeron D 310 (2.13/533), 315, 320, 325, 330, 335, 340, 345, 350 (3.2/533); Pentium 4 2.4/533HT, 2.8/533, 3.06/533, 3.06/533HT, 2.8/800, 3/800, 3.2/800, 3.4/800
Socket 775 / Prescott: Celeron D 326 (2.53 GHz), 331, 336, 341, 346, 351, 355 (3.33 GHz); Pentium 4 505, 506 (both 2.66 HGz), 511, 516, 521, 524, 530, 531, 541, 550 (3.4 GHz)
Socket 775 / Prescott-2M: Pentium 4 630 (3 GHz), 640, 650 (3.4 GHz)
Socket 775 / Cedar Mill: Celeron D 347 (3.06/512/533), 352, 356, 360, 365 (3.6/512/533); Pentium 4 641 (3.2/2M/800), 651, 661 (3.6/2M/800)
I think this is all for now. I don't even like Netburst CPUs too much 🤣 I outright hated them in their heyday but now they are humble members of my CPU collection.
Unfortunately I've never run into any Extreme (or Engineering Sample) parts. But they were rare in this poor country.
Shame on us, doomed from the start
May God have mercy on our dirty little hearts
Reply 90 of 94, by Radical Vision
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- Oldbie
I see the Pentium IV to be original only on 478 socket, as the 775 one is cheating and it sucks, so better to stick to 478...
Mah systems retro, old, newer (Radical stuff)
W3680 4.5/ GA-x58 UD7/ R9 280x
K7 2.6/ NF7-S/ HD3850
IBM x2 P3 933/ GA-6VXD7/ Voodoo V 5.5K
Cmq P2 450/ GA-BX2000/ V2 SLI
IBM PC365
Cmq DeskPRO 486/33
IBM PS/2 Model 56
SPS IntelleXT 8088
Reply 91 of 94, by alvaro84
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- Member
wrote:I see the Pentium IV to be original only on 478 socket, as the 775 one is cheating and it sucks, so better to stick to 478...
I wouldn't say 775 P4 is cheating. It's merely an abomination 😁
But the roots of the P4 are not in 478. They descend into an even older socket, S423 which could only accomodate those big green BGA-on-PGA Willamette P4s. No Celerons, no Northwoods (at least not without an adapter), no higher FSB than the initial 4*100 MHz.
I actually like the clumsy sexy appearance of these 423 CPUs. Paired with those short lived RDRAM sticks they make pretty unique setups. Performance-wise they were never that great, and definitely couldn't give the best bang for the buck but they are an interesting part of history.
Shame on us, doomed from the start
May God have mercy on our dirty little hearts
Reply 92 of 94, by KCompRoom2000
I currently have 7 Pentium 4s in my collection.
Pentium 4 CPUs that I have as spares:
- 1.8 GHz Intel Pentium 4-M Northwood (Socket 478 w/o heatspread)
- 2.0 GHz Intel Celeron* Northwood (Socket 478)
Pentium 4 CPUs that are installed on the machines I own:
- 2.0 GHz Intel Pentium 4-M Northwood (Socket 478 w/o heatspread) - Dell Latitude C640
- 2.2 GHz Intel Pentium 4-M Northwood (Socket 478 w/o heatspread) - Dell Inspiron 8200
- 2.2 GHz Intel Pentium 4 Northwood (Socket 478) (400 MHz FSB) - Compaq EVO D510
- 2.4 GHz Intel Pentium 4 Northwood (Socket 478) (533 MHz FSB) - Dell Optiplex GX260 (spare mobo)
- 3.2 GHz Intel Pentium 4 640 Prescott (LGA775) (800 MHz FSB, 2MB L2) - Dell Optiplex GX520
* Do Netburst Celerons count? I'm assuming they do since others have already mentioned having those in their collections.
Reply 93 of 94, by Radical Vision
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- Oldbie
wrote:I wouldn't say 775 P4 is cheating. It's merely an abomination :D […]
wrote:I see the Pentium IV to be original only on 478 socket, as the 775 one is cheating and it sucks, so better to stick to 478...
I wouldn't say 775 P4 is cheating. It's merely an abomination 😁
But the roots of the P4 are not in 478. They descend into an even older socket, S423 which could only accomodate those big green BGA-on-PGA Willamette P4s. No Celerons, no Northwoods (at least not without an adapter), no higher FSB than the initial 4*100 MHz.
I actually like the clumsy sexy appearance of these 423 CPUs. Paired with those short lived RDRAM sticks they make pretty unique setups. Performance-wise they were never that great, and definitely couldn't give the best bang for the buck but they are an interesting part of history.
Well while on 478 the P4 at least is somehow good, but on 775 is total crap compared to the other 775 CPUs..
Still i prefer the 478 as main, also no space, money, time and more to spend for useless socket like 423...
Now x2 more in the collection Pentium IV 3.2GHz or better to say post 3.4GHz...
And Pentium IV 2.8GHz, now only need to find the damn Pentium IV 3.4GHz, as i have great Intel board for them..
So far
Pentium I 233MHz MMX (have also Pentium I 200)
Pentium II 450MHz - Deschutes
Pentium III 1.4GHz - Tualatin
Pentium IV 3.2GHz - Northwood C
Mah systems retro, old, newer (Radical stuff)
W3680 4.5/ GA-x58 UD7/ R9 280x
K7 2.6/ NF7-S/ HD3850
IBM x2 P3 933/ GA-6VXD7/ Voodoo V 5.5K
Cmq P2 450/ GA-BX2000/ V2 SLI
IBM PC365
Cmq DeskPRO 486/33
IBM PS/2 Model 56
SPS IntelleXT 8088
Reply 94 of 94, by greasemonkey90s
Pentium4 1.8a nortwood have 2
Pentium4 2.4 northwood
Pentium4 2.6 northwood
Pentium4 2.8 northwood
Pentium4 2.8 northwood 30 cap
Pentium 4 3.2 northwood
Pentium 4 530 s775 2 of them
Pentium 4 631 s775
Motherboards
S478
Ecs 661fx-m
Ecs pt800ce-a
Intel 865g 2 boards
Gigabyte ga81pe1000 875 chipset
S775
Ecs p4m800pro-m
Intel d955xbk