VOGONS


First post, by aries-mu

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Guys, does a 486 motherboard exist that is able to set a FSB to CPU multiplier to 2.5?

We'd have our unicorn 486 CPU!!!!

• Take an Enhanced AM486 DX4-120 Write Back
• Set the FSB at 50 MHz instead of 40 MHz
• Push the PCI at 50 MHz if possible (I know I know...) otherwise set the PCI at 2/3 so that it runs exactly at 33 MHz (instead of the unfair 27 MHz if the FSB runs at 40 MHz)
• Set the FSB to CPU multiplier at 2.5, so that the CPU runs basically non-overclocked at 125 MHz (come on, from 120 to 125 even I wouldn't consider that overclocked, and I HATE CPU overclocking)
• FPM or maybe even EDO 60 ns RAM and WB L2 double-banked Cache running at 50 MHz?

feipoa, what do you think?

Thanks!

They said therefore to him: Who are you?
Jesus said to them: The beginning, who also speak unto you

Computers should be fun inside not outside! 😉 (by Joakim)

Reply 1 of 18, by stamasd

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In 486 systems the motherboards don't have multiplier settings. The multipier is built into the CPU and fixed

I/O, I/O,
It's off to disk I go,
With a bit and a byte
And a read and a write,
I/O, I/O

Reply 2 of 18, by aries-mu

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stamasd wrote:

In 486 systems the motherboards don't have multiplier settings. The multipier is built into the CPU and fixed

Ouch I didn't know that! Too bad!!!

I thought we could mess around with jumpers and stuff...

EDIT:
Riiiiiight! Now I remember a diagram of some CPUs I saw loooong time ago, in which the clock multiplier was inside the CPU!

They said therefore to him: Who are you?
Jesus said to them: The beginning, who also speak unto you

Computers should be fun inside not outside! 😉 (by Joakim)

Reply 3 of 18, by tpowell.ca

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never heard of pre-Pentium boards having such a multiplier (non-integer).

I think overclocking is misunderstood.
When Intel or others manufacture CPUs, they set themselves a target clock speed (for a given supply voltage and desired TDP), and when a CPU does not pass their stringent tests, they give it a lower rated clock speed assuming it is not completely defective.
If you get a CPU that is stable at the rated speed, this does not mean it can't be clocked higher without damage. It just means that most likely it was designed around a target that it safely exceeds.

eg: I have plenty of CPUs that can happily run 20% even 40% higher than their rated speed, and this without raising the core voltage.

Don't be fearful of overclocking.

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Reply 4 of 18, by tpowell.ca

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stamasd wrote:

In 486 systems the motherboards don't have multiplier settings. The multipier is built into the CPU and fixed

This is not always the case.
My BIOSTAR and PCChips M919 had 2x/3x multiplier jumpers.

They are not always advertised as such, and often are just part of the baker's dozen of jumpers that need to be set for each CPU type.

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Reply 5 of 18, by aries-mu

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tpowell.ca wrote:
never heard of pre-Pentium boards having such a multiplier (non-integer). […]
Show full quote

never heard of pre-Pentium boards having such a multiplier (non-integer).

I think overclocking is misunderstood.
When Intel or others manufacture CPUs, they set themselves a target clock speed (for a given supply voltage and desired TDP), and when a CPU does not pass their stringent tests, they give it a lower rated clock speed assuming it is not completely defective.
If you get a CPU that is stable at the rated speed, this does not mean it can't be clocked higher without damage. It just means that most likely it was designed around a target that it safely exceeds.

eg: I have plenty of CPUs that can happily run 20% even 40% higher than their rated speed, and this without raising the core voltage.

Don't be fearful of overclocking.

This is interesting to know, thanks so much.
Mine is not fear (if done within certain boundaries). I don't know what it is! 🤣 Maybe I don't like that the CPU has a number printed on it and it runs at a different frequency 🤣 I guess it's perfectionism 😁

They said therefore to him: Who are you?
Jesus said to them: The beginning, who also speak unto you

Computers should be fun inside not outside! 😉 (by Joakim)

Reply 6 of 18, by firage

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Those multipliers are still built into the CPU, DX4 and onwards. The same jumper switches one type of CPU between 2x and 3x and another between 3x and 4x.

My big-red-switch 486

Reply 7 of 18, by aries-mu

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firage wrote:

Those multipliers are still built into the CPU, DX4 and onwards. The same jumper switches one type of CPU between 2x and 3x and another between 3x and 4x.

Thanks!

They said therefore to him: Who are you?
Jesus said to them: The beginning, who also speak unto you

Computers should be fun inside not outside! 😉 (by Joakim)

Reply 8 of 18, by tpowell.ca

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On the PCChips M919 v3.4

CPU SPEED CONFIGURATION (DX4/5X86/X5 ONLY)

 Speed       JP6
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
2x Closed
3x Open
4x Closed

I checked and it worked on my AMD DX5-133.

On the BIOSTAR MB-8433UUD v2.x

 Speed      JP45
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
1x 1-2 or 2-3
2x 1-2, 4-5
3x 1-2
4x 1-2, 4-5
Last edited by tpowell.ca on 2018-07-25, 20:10. Edited 1 time in total.
  • Merlin: MS-4144, AMD5x86-160 32MB, 16GB CF, ZIP100, Orpheus, GUS, S3 VirgeGX 2MB
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Reply 9 of 18, by derSammler

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What firage said. Closing JP6 can be either 2x or 4x, depending on the CPU, since the multipliers are built into the CPU.

Reply 10 of 18, by tpowell.ca

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derSammler wrote:

What firage said. Closing JP6 can be either 2x or 4x, depending on the CPU, since the multipliers are built into the CPU.

You mean, 2x/4x OR 3x depending on jumper setting..
I recall getting the DX5-133 to behave like a DX4-100 with the jumper removed, and this while keeping the 33MHz bus speed.
I regret not trying to see if I could go to a clock tripled 50 MHz bus. I wonder how a DX4-150 would run.

  • Merlin: MS-4144, AMD5x86-160 32MB, 16GB CF, ZIP100, Orpheus, GUS, S3 VirgeGX 2MB
    Tesla: GA-6BXC, VIA C3 Ezra-T, 256MB, 120GB SATA, YMF744, GUSpnp, Quadro2
    Newton: K6XV3+/66, AMD K6-III+500, 256MB, 32GB SSD, AWE32, Voodoo3

Reply 11 of 18, by derSammler

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That's because the X5 supports 3x and 4x, just like the enhanced 486 by AMD (undocumented).

Reply 12 of 18, by aries-mu

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tpowell.ca wrote:

I regret not trying to see if I could go to a clock tripled 50 MHz bus. I wonder how a DX4-150 would run.

sorry bro! 😎

They said therefore to him: Who are you?
Jesus said to them: The beginning, who also speak unto you

Computers should be fun inside not outside! 😉 (by Joakim)

Reply 13 of 18, by tpowell.ca

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derSammler wrote:

That's because the X5 supports 3x and 4x, just like the enhanced 486 by AMD (undocumented).

well, well, well. I learned something new, again.

Thanks derSammler

  • Merlin: MS-4144, AMD5x86-160 32MB, 16GB CF, ZIP100, Orpheus, GUS, S3 VirgeGX 2MB
    Tesla: GA-6BXC, VIA C3 Ezra-T, 256MB, 120GB SATA, YMF744, GUSpnp, Quadro2
    Newton: K6XV3+/66, AMD K6-III+500, 256MB, 32GB SSD, AWE32, Voodoo3

Reply 14 of 18, by Anonymous Coward

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The Intel DX4 was supposed to have support for a 2.5X multiplier, because you can read about it in the DX4 datasheets. Even some motherboards and VRM interposers show the jumper settings for 2.5X, but somehow at the last minute this feature was removed.
I believe the theory was that the 2.5X setting was related to the cancelled DX3 CPU, which would have run at 83MHz like the POD. I guess the DX3 likely would have used the same dies as the DX4.

"Will the highways on the internets become more few?" -Gee Dubya
V'Ger XT|Upgraded AT|Ultimate 386|Super VL/EISA 486|SMP VL/EISA Pentium

Reply 15 of 18, by feipoa

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In addition to what tpowell said, I think CPU manufacturers sometimes deliberately did not want to rate CPU speeds higher or to qualify them at higher speeds so as not to compete with their higher-end CPU lines. An example of this might be the AMD Am5x86-133. I think all, or nearly all, will run stable at 160 MHz and stock voltage. Imagine if they marketed the Am5x86-160, sales of K5, and later K6 CPUs would fall and those CPUs have a higher price tag. Same for the Pentium Overdrive POD83. Some run at 100 MHz at stock voltage. All the ones I've modded to run at 4 V run at 100 MHz. Similarly, the K5-PR200 wasn't really marketed. Cyrix conveniently didn't sell their 5x86-133/4x as a stand-alone CPU. Who would want to buy a higher priced Cyrix 6x86 at 80 or 100 MHz when you can have a Cyrix 5x86 at 133 MHz with marginally less performance. A lot of consumers at the time also just looked at the frequency - 100 MHz vs. 133 MHz. 133 MHz is cheaper and has a higher frequency, buy that one! Because of this marketing ploy, I don't always view some CPU's as being "overclocked", but rather, being run optimally. This does not include cases whereby you need to get fancy with cooling and what not to overclock. The 1.6 V, K6-III+ 400ATZ is another good example of a CPU which nearly always clocks to at least 500 MHz without issue. I don't think I've seen a case whereby it didn't.

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Reply 16 of 18, by aries-mu

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Interesting points, thanks!

There's room for countless possibilities and combinations 🤣!

They said therefore to him: Who are you?
Jesus said to them: The beginning, who also speak unto you

Computers should be fun inside not outside! 😉 (by Joakim)

Reply 17 of 18, by stamasd

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Similarly the first CPU in the Mendocino series, the Celeron 300A. That one was marketed way below the speed that the technology allowed it to reach - as the same process resulted in 500+MHz not too much later. The 300A could effortlessly made to run at 450MHz and above even without any extra voltage (I have one that does 504MHz at stock voltage). Intel didn't want it to cut into the sales of the older Deschutes PII-450 thus only sold it at the beginning as a 300MHz part. Later they released the exact some core at higher "official" speeds.

I/O, I/O,
It's off to disk I go,
With a bit and a byte
And a read and a write,
I/O, I/O

Reply 18 of 18, by aries-mu

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well, for sure all this would have made my days if I knew it when I was a kid. At that time, the use was for real use (of course mainly gaming, although not only), not like now for the sake of old times. So, you had games running slow and no money to buy better hardware... knowing these things would have been great, not talking about the thrill of boosting performance like that as a kid!

They said therefore to him: Who are you?
Jesus said to them: The beginning, who also speak unto you

Computers should be fun inside not outside! 😉 (by Joakim)