Reply 20 of 42, by ux-3
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Kruton 9000 wrote on 2024-06-26, 16:14:ux-3 wrote on 2024-06-26, 14:01:I can throttle my P3 down to around 386-16. It can emulate early 90s in speed. But from there to 500 MHz is a vast gap it can't cover. I can pick 500 MHz, 750 and 1000. Or I pick like 386-16, 25, 33. That is all I found, without swapping in a P2.
This is weird. Are there really no jumpers on your motherboard that set the bus to 66 MHz? On many boards even frequencies 75, 83 and more are available. Or Pentium 3 doesn't work with lower FSB?
Bios! This P3 has a (locked) multiplier of 7.5, which will give a spread from 500@66MhZ up to 1000@133MHz. Sure I can pick values between, but that is hardly needed at P3 speeds. Either it is too slow at 1000MHz or too fast at 500. It is more interesting when you slow it down. I can roughly generate SpeedSys rating from 4-8 when I disable the cache. If I want anything else, I can swap the CPU. With P2 and P3 I can cover 166Mhz-1100MHz. Or I cover SpeedSys ratings from like 2-9. That doesn't make this an all around DOS talent.
Shponglefan wrote on 2024-06-26, 16:19:My experience with my Cedar Mill P4 is I have throttled it down to 286-12 MHz speeds. It can generally cover mid-range 486 (with cache disabled) down to 286. There is more of a gap above that, although Pentium speeds are achievable with ODCM / ACPI throttling.
Yes, ironically a P3 offers great slowdown, but is too slow for it to be used sensibly. When you speed up the CPU to P4+, things get more flexible.
Shponglefan wrote on 2024-06-26, 16:19:I think it depends on what we mean by options here.
Maybe you want to call it choices. With a more modern board, you don't need to chose what you want but what you turn off, say to free IRQs. It feels a bit like reversed thinking vs P3.
Kruton 9000 wrote on 2024-06-26, 16:43:Another thing Socket 775.
Well, that you do get quiet easily. But what do you do with the AGP next to it?
Retro PC warning: The things you own end up owning you.