sliderider wrote:After months of not finding one for a reasonable price I finally broke down and bought one new in box for $42 shipped. That was the lowest I had seen a NIB POD for a long time. I figured it would be safer going with one that hadn't been used because nobody had the chance to overclock it and blow it up yet. I hope it works.
I got a NIB POD83 about 2 months ago. My first POD, in fact. I tried OC'ing it, but alas it fails the Quake timedemo test @ 100 MHz. I guess its production date is not a "magic" one. I'm looking forward to reading about your experiments with the Biostar 486 mobo. When are you going to start messing about with it? 😀
Solved! I got this working. I set the mobo's CPU voltage to 5v. The POD83 now overclocks to 100MHz, in write-back mode. It passes the Quake timedemo test. The BIOS timings are more or less "maxed out", including fastest cache timings. The DRAM read state is = "1", not "0", but apart from that, all settings are set to their fastest values.