VOGONS


First post, by computerguy08

User metadata
Rank Member
Rank
Member

I had a bit of free time recently and decided I want to do some experiments with my UMC Pentium board which I got recently, a Gigabyte GA-586AM.
https://www.ultimateretro.net/en/motherboards/2729
On the PCB I noticed what looked like footprints for a possible VRM upgrade, which would've given the board dual voltage rails for a Pentium MMX presumably.

So I did the right thing, desoldered the bypass wire from the Vcc2 rail (Vcore) and added my own DC-DC step down converter instead, which I set conveniently at cca. 2.2V

1.jpg
Filename
1.jpg
File size
1.85 MiB
Views
437 views
File license
CC-BY-4.0

There was one more challenge though: the K6-2 wouldn't fit in the socket, one corner was floating. Upon further investigation, I learned K6-2's only fit in Socket 7 because there is one extra pin in one of the corners.
Checking the datasheet reveals that pin is used just for keying, which is normally a good thing, you wouldn't want to send 3.5V on the core, it would probably fry it 😜

4.png
Filename
4.png
File size
161.64 KiB
Views
437 views
File license
CC-BY-4.0

For the conditions of my experiment, it was safe to remove the pin from the CPU, I had set up an appropriate VRM.
And after a power switch flip, it came to life!

2.jpg
Filename
2.jpg
File size
1.28 MiB
Views
437 views
File license
CC-BY-4.0

Because the BIOS is so old on this board, there was no chance it would have K6 microcodes, therefore it was detected as a 486DX-66, which is funny.
After a bit of playing around, I was able to get the K6 running at 300MHz (50FSB x 6), anything faster wouldn't POST.
Still, the results are pretty impressive for a Socket 5 board.

3.jpg
Filename
3.jpg
File size
1.68 MiB
Views
437 views
File license
CC-BY-4.0

Moral of the story: you can run a K6-2 on Socket 5, but make sure the board has separate power rails (you can check with a multimeter).

Reply 1 of 3, by retardware

User metadata
Rank Oldbie
Rank
Oldbie

Nice experiment 😀

computerguy08 wrote on 2021-11-10, 16:33:

... remove the pin from the CPU ...

I guess some people will cry "Heresy!" 🤣

Reply 3 of 3, by majestyk

User metadata
Rank Oldbie
Rank
Oldbie

Mainboards with a VRM-socket or prepared for a VRM-socket are always wired for dual voltage.
Sometimes there are jumpers to be removed to enable split voltage operation, on some boards a trace on the backside has to be cut.

What about (carefully) drilling a 1 mm hole in the socket for socket 7 CPUs?