I think I have a 915/skt478 mobo too, though mine still runs classic DDR1 and is PCI-E + AGP. Asrock P4Dual-915GL.
As for Cedar Mill on 865 - IIRC they might use the same CPUID? I know I was looking at my MSI 865PE Neo3-V's CPU list and found no mention of the 631 being compatible.
Despite that, it did POST with the 631 and detected it properly (and enabled HT properly).
"Enter at your own peril, past the bolted door..."
Main PC: i5 3470, GB B75M-D3H, 16GB RAM, 2x1TB
98SE : P3 650, Soyo SY-6BA+IV, 384MB RAM, 80GB
On the other hand, I've had little to no luck upgrading OEM systems that use the chipsets you mentioned. I tried swapping dual core chips into Dell Optiplex, IBM Netvista and HP i915 or i925 prebuits with no success..... maybe this is mostly an OEM thing?
This may no longer be the conventional wisdom, but way back then, the general understanding was that the i915/925 had removed dual-processor/core support. The i865 had it, somewhat 'unofficially' (i.e. probably shared too much design with a Xeon chipset), then when somebody in Taiwan cooked up a way to design a dual-processor i865 board, Intel was very grumpy and made sure that you couldn't do the same thing with the i915/925. Then, of course, Intel launched dual-core chips (perhaps in response to AMD - I can't remember who came up with dual-core single-socket systems first) and this became a problem, so they launched the i945/i955 to bring dual-core support back.
(This is also what let... most of the Taiwanese manufacturers... make LGA775 i865 boards that supported at least hotburst 90nm dual-core CPUs to give people with AGP/DDR1 an upgrade path to dual-coreness.)
Did somebody in Taiwan actually find a way to get dual-processor/core support out of an i915 while I wasn't paying attention?
Despite that, it did POST with the 631 and detected it properly (and enabled HT properly).
It may depend on what stepping that 631 was, the later ones had newer VR06 configuration and the earlier ones had VR05A which is closer to Prescott and may work without official support.
I also remember messing about with an Asus - can't remember what model, but it had an intel 915 chipset - P5GD or P5GD2 perhaps? - the system I liberated it from came with a Celeron D, and despite no mention of compatibility on Asus's website, the board booted up and ran fine with a Pentium D 925....
I guess it could be ASUS P5GD2-X based on i915. But I've never had one to test it with Pentium D 65nm
I have a ThinkCentre A51 USFF coming tomorrow, model 8107-71G. This is an early-ish 775 machine with a 915G chipset onboard, but it's also a transitional model, Lenovo taking over most of the IBM stuff past this point. Somewhere in 2005 there was a microcode update added to a previous BIOS release (2GJT17A) from the release notes.
12GKT17A/2GJT17A 2- Updates video BIOS to build number 1233 3- Updates microcode update files 4- Fixes a problem where the system reboots continuosly with new 5 processors 6- Fixes potential 0162 errors 7- Fixes a problem where the system hangs during S3 resume 8- Fixes intermittent 0197 error 9- Implements Intel 915/925 specification update
The attachment Screenshot_3.png is no longer available
F62 is a Cedar Mill, so sufficed so say I should be okay there getting an earlier stepping.
The interesting one is F61. I can't for the life of me figure that one out, but CPU-World's CPUID DB has F61 down for a Xeon 5060? That makes no sense as the 915 doesn't support dualcore.
Did some of the Xeon codes overlap the Extreme Editions?
They might have but I don't think this applies to this, the only extremes that can work on that machine are the Prescott ones and those are a separate cpuid I believe.
Sorry if I'm necroposting here, but I am trying to research potential pin mods or tape mods for getting VRM Config 06 chips working on 04A systems. I have a few Cedar Mill P4s on the D0 stepping but unfortunately they don't work on my zd8000 as-is. I'm fairly certain it should be possible to make them work without the need of a BIOS update?
What usually helps is cutting off the trailing decimals by rounding up or down. This is in general so not specific voltages you need getting mentioned, but examples... say board will do 1.48 or 1.47, CPU demands 1.475, so mask off the .005 and try it so the board gives it 1.47 or go the other way and monkey the pins for it to pick up as 1.48... works on 370 stuff too where something wants 1.75 and vreg does 1.7 or 1.8
Unicorn herding operations are proceeding, but all the totes of hens teeth and barrels of rocking horse poop give them plenty of hiding spots.
Sudoswrote on 2024-03-22, 03:08:I have a ThinkCentre A51 USFF coming tomorrow, model 8107-71G. This is an early-ish 775 machine with a 915G chipset onboard, but […] Show full quote
I have a ThinkCentre A51 USFF coming tomorrow, model 8107-71G. This is an early-ish 775 machine with a 915G chipset onboard, but it's also a transitional model, Lenovo taking over most of the IBM stuff past this point. Somewhere in 2005 there was a microcode update added to a previous BIOS release (2GJT17A) from the release notes.
12GKT17A/2GJT17A 2- Updates video BIOS to build number 1233 3- Updates microcode update files 4- Fixes a problem where the system reboots continuosly with new 5 processors 6- Fixes potential 0162 errors 7- Fixes a problem where the system hangs during S3 resume 8- Fixes intermittent 0197 error 9- Implements Intel 915/925 specification update
The attachment Screenshot_3.png is no longer available
F62 is a Cedar Mill, so sufficed so say I should be okay there getting an earlier stepping.
The interesting one is F61. I can't for the life of me figure that one out, but CPU-World's CPUID DB has F61 down for a Xeon 5060? That makes no sense as the 915 doesn't support dualcore.
Hi, did you ever get this to work with Cedar Mill? I also have a ThinkCentre A51 (8135-CTO) and was curious if it would work, I currently have Windows 10 32-bit with a P4 531, but have ordered a 631 and was wondering if it will work, so that I can get some Windows 11 action going 😁