I'm really experiencing exactly how quirky and flakey hardware used to be 15 years ago, but I'm still having fun! 😀
I ran in to an irritating shortcoming of the ECS Photon AF1 KT600 board while I was testing some Bartons in-between Thunderbird CPU changes. The motherboard will not make it though 3Dmark03 "Battle Of Proxycon" with a Barton CPU clocked higher than ~2000 MHz.
At first I though it was an issue with the Cheiftek 350W PSU lacking amps on the 12V rail just as member kanecvr had foreseen so I tested some other PSUs (Seasonic 500W 30A-5V / 33A-12V, FD Newton R2 1000W 30A-5V / 75A-12V and Cooltek 500W 45A-5V / 36A-12V). I think we can exclude the PSU from the list of probable causes.
The issue must be that the Photon AF1s AGP port has a hard time handling the X1950 Pro eventhough the Radeon card takes most of it's power from the two 12V molex jacks. I tested running AGP4X and turning off fast writes and such but no change. As soon as a Barton CPU is cloked at ~2 GHz or higher regardless of multiplier and voltage the compuer will reset during the "Battle Of Proxycon" test.
So I'm tinkering with other K7 stuff this weekend.
Here are two motherboards I should recap... when I have managed to order caps and when I do not work 60 hours a week.
First an Abit KV7 VIA KT600 board which would solve my benching issues, or so I hope. It has a cap blown open but it dosn't really show on this picture but the missing chipset cooler is easy to spot! 😜
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And also an Abit NF7-S V2.0, one of the better nForce2 motherboards. The bad cap is easier to spot on this board, I'm thinking of stealing a cap from some other motherboard... 😀
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Today I have been testing a board I thought I would use in my "Ultimate Year 2000" build, the Asus A7M266 AMD 760 chipset motherboard. I have now found a better motherboard to use in the Y2K build, I will show that board later.
But lets start with some background, perhaps as much legend or lore as history.
The AMD 760 chipset was released in October 2000 along with the Athlon 1200 even if the availability of motherboards was poor the first months, especially outside Asia. The motherboard you actually could get was AMD's own Corona EVT8 AMD 760 motherboard but most of these motherboards went to system builders.
The seemingly launch ready Asus A7M266 motherboard was shown to the public in October 2000 and the 1.01 revision was perhaps sold in Taiwan but never reviewed and definitely not sold outside Asia. These first non preproduction motherboards were at least in ciculation in one way or another in Asia as it was this version which had the multiplier block actually present on the motherboard and not only silk sceened like on all later revisons.
According to the legend the multiplier block was removed because of demands from AMD. AMD was at the time more than a little bit irritated over the fact that most motherboard makers had show very little interest in promoting the AMD 750 chipset the year before and thus made the removal of the multiplier block a condition for delivering any more chipsets to Asus. This could also be the main reason the Asus A7M266 was a no-show in the first months after the AMD 760 release.
The multiplier block can be solderd in on all revisions but needs some hard to solder and hard to find 8 legged resistor clusters to function. It's a well documented mod but nothing I will try and this is also the reason I will not use this motherboard in my "Ultimate Year 2000" build.
Late 2000 the Asus A7M266 was already at revison 1.03 and these were the first motherboards put on the slow banana boats heading for the US and Europe. The boards would reach retailers and reviewers late February with reviews staring to pop up shortly after. Revision 1.04 started showing up in Asia in January 2001 with rumors starting to spread on forums that this revsion in fact had a functioning multiplier block, the rumors were of course false.
How the overclocking community even knew the multiplier block was missing from rev 1.02 and 1.03 I dont know as these posts in January 2001 were among the the first forum posts in English about the Asus A7M266 I could find other than speculation about the Asus A7M266 and AMD 760 in general prior to the AMD 760 release. The chipset and a preproduction sample of the A7M266 had been shown on some event during the summer 2000.
Revision 1.02 of the Asus A7M would also show up in Europe and USA but from what I can gather all reviwed motherboards were revison 1.03, 1.04 and 1.05. For some reason (cough cough Intel) the AMD 760 chipset just like it's predecessor the AMD 750 chipset was not promoted much by the motherboard manufacturers. The fact that AMD wanted a pretty penny for every sold chipset and the high prices of DDR memory probably also played parts in the lack of interest from the board makers.
Many hardware sites diddn't even get review samples of AMD 760 motherboards at all and only reviewed motherboards during the summer 2001 when they could borrow motherboards from retailers. Some even wrote that the chipset was old technology on it's way out soon to be replaced by VIAs KT266A in their first AMD 760 reviews but at the same time all was impressed by the chipsets performance.
This is my Asus A7M266 running a Thunderbird AXIA 1000 and a Radeon X850XT video card!
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This is the final BIOS, it do not recognise ... well hardly any CPUs correctly. Not even models released early summer 2000 running at stock speed... Asus just didn't care! 😁
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New PC: i9 12900K @5GHz all cores @1.2v. MSI PRO Z690-A. 32GB DDR4 3600 CL14. 3070Ti.
Old PC: Dual Xeon X5690@4.6GHz, EVGA SR-2, 48GB DDR3R@2000MHz, Intel X25-M. GTX 980ti.
Older PC: K6-3+ 400@600MHz, PC-Chips M577, 256MB SDRAM, AWE64, Voodoo Banshee.