First post, by majestyk
- Rank
- Oldbie
This mainboard was released in 1997, it was the first Socket 7 board with AGP support and it was built around VIA´s VP3 chipset.
To my surprise - and in contrary to what the manual states - at least the later revision(s) officially support(s) 75 MHz FSB.
So I installed the latest BIOS, inserted 2 x 256 MB PC133 SD-RAM and a K6-2 500, set the core voltage to 2.2V adding a resistor (since the PA-2012 only supports 2.1 and 2.8V out of the box).
With the multiplier set to x2 it is reported as "K6-2 400" by BIOS, but runs at 450 MHz with 75 MHZ FSB.
BUT, it will only POST in about 2 out of 10 cases. Since AGP and PCI bus are being overclocked in 75 MHz mode (no seperate settings) I tried different RAM sticks, different graphic cards (AGP, PCI, ISA) and different CPU core voltages. All this won´t change this behaviour a bit.
Back in those days I did zero overclocking so I have no idea if this problem is caused by the mainboard itself or by the fact that I don´t have any graphic card that´s stable at 37.5 MHz, or by some other issue.
I also found that a capacitor has been removed near the clock generator. You could see it had not been removed with force but by desoldering.
It´s "C151" that is connected to ground at one sinde and to pin 40 of the clock generator (W48S67-04H) via a 33R resistor.
I tested with a 1µF capacitor because according to the datasheet of a similar clock-gen pin 40 and 44 are for 1.5V voltage supply, but with the capacitor the oscillator would not work at any frequency (exept 0 Hz).