Reply 20 of 28, by smeezekitty
You will greatly benefit from more RAM. 8 MB is a huge bottleneck in 95. 16MB is usable. 32-64 is the sweet spot.
You will greatly benefit from more RAM. 8 MB is a huge bottleneck in 95. 16MB is usable. 32-64 is the sweet spot.
Found a bunch of EDO ram at a thriftsore, able to upgrade to 64Mb. nice.
Found mostly 4, 8 and 16 MB modules. No 32MB ones, but 64MB is still veerryyy nice. If the motherboard still booted.
You can possibly (depending if the board isn't finicky) get a 233 w/ MMX going by using the PowerLeap PL-ProMMX Plus
http://homepage3.nifty.com/sandy55/Interposer … us%20Ver.%204.0
If you need 128 MB EDO DIMM modules I might be able to hunt some listings for you. I purchased a bunch awhile back with the intention of expanding my machines to a full 384 MB.
wrote:I think the 430HX is the one Intel chipset that does not have that limitation (as long as you have the correct TAG RAM). No TAG RAM can help with the 430VX, though. I know the VIA VP2/97 can also cache at least 256MB with the correct TAG RAM, but not all boards have it.
Unfortunately my Triton II is affected by the 8-bit tag cache. Boo. This will soon be resolved with the aforementioned power of K6-III.
But get this... Intel offered the ability to go beyond 64 MB of RAM on the original Socket 4 P60/P66 platform with the A82496-60 cache controller! In the case of the PS/2 Model 95 you can expand the system with 256 MB of SIMM memory with no penalties whatsoever:
http://ps-2.kev009.com/ohlandl/complexes/Type4-P.html
So Intel was deliberately short-changing everyone 4 years later when they had already solved the cache issue prior.
wrote:So Intel was deliberately short-changing everyone 4 years later when they had already solved the cache issue prior.
Probably just a cost-cutting measure, as the more expensive HX chipset could handle it with the appropriate tag ram. Remember, 64MB was a huge amount of memory for home users when these boards first came out.
wrote:wrote:So Intel was deliberately short-changing everyone 4 years later when they had already solved the cache issue prior.
Probably just a cost-cutting measure, as the more expensive HX chipset could handle it with the appropriate tag ram. Remember, 64MB was a huge amount of memory for home users when these boards first came out.
My board has a 128MB limit. I don't have the L2 cach module though, any idea where to get that?
I'll need to repair it first of course, hopefully its the PSU.
wrote:Probably just a cost-cutting measure, as the more expensive HX chipset could handle it with the appropriate tag ram. Remember, 64MB was a huge amount of memory for home users when these boards first came out.
But many OEMs who implemented Triton II didn't bother to add the 11-bit tag. It should have just been a default option out of the box rather than intel leaving the option for OEMs to choose the 'wrong' tag.
wrote:My board has a 128MB limit. I don't have the L2 cach module though, any idea where to get that?
I'll need to repair it first of course, hopefully its the PSU.
Your board doesn't have any CPU cache? If so, the only way to get cache would be to get the PowerLeap PL-K6-III so you can use the K6-2+ or K6-III's on-die cache.
wrote:But many OEMs who implemented Triton II didn't bother to add the 11-bit tag. It should have just been a default option out of th […]
wrote:Probably just a cost-cutting measure, as the more expensive HX chipset could handle it with the appropriate tag ram. Remember, 64MB was a huge amount of memory for home users when these boards first came out.
But many OEMs who implemented Triton II didn't bother to add the 11-bit tag. It should have just been a default option out of the box rather than intel leaving the option for OEMs to choose the 'wrong' tag.
wrote:My board has a 128MB limit. I don't have the L2 cach module though, any idea where to get that?
I'll need to repair it first of course, hopefully its the PSU.
Your board doesn't have any CPU cache? If so, the only way to get cache would be to get the PowerLeap PL-K6-III so you can use the K6-2+ or K6-III's on-die cache.
I am talking about this: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cache_on_a_stick
wrote:I am talking about this: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cache_on_a_stick
Ohhh right, a COAST module. The part number for the module for your compaq is: 236708-001
I couldn't find any on ebay. There's this random website, you could ask the guy if he has one:
https://www.bigblueparts.com/pc-11161-230-cpq … che-memory.aspx
But yeah if you can't source the COAST module, your next best option would be a PL-K6-III (although finding a COAST module would probably be easier).
wrote:Messed with the jumpers again, got it running at 120mhz, better to only start using this when I bought a fan though.
For a fan you are most likely looking for a 40mm fan with a Molex power connector (the 4pin plug used to power hard drives etc.) it will be double ended so you can daisy chain it to a power connector that is in use even if you have no free plugs 😀
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