Can I replace Pentium III with a faster CPU, or overclock?

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fred2
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PostPosted: Sun Mar 29, 2009 1:46 pm    Post subject: Can I replace Pentium III with a faster CPU, or overclock? Reply with quote

I have a ECS P6BAT-A+ motherboard with an Intel Pentium IIIE CPU running at 733MHz, with WindowsXP. Can I remove this from its socket and replace it with something faster please? Or can I safely overclock?

I ask because computer parts that are a few years old can be obtained very cheaply from eBay, so it may be worth doing.

By the way. the Pentium III is mounted into something that sticks out at 90 degrees to the motherboard, and the alternative socket on the motherboard for lower spec CPUs is not used.

The details appended below were obtained by using Everest Home Edition.

Everest never shows my CPU temperature but I recall that is is shown as being about blood heat (37 def C) in the BIOS display.

Thanks

fred.

CPU Type Intel Pentium IIIE, 733 MHz (5.5 x 133)
CPU Alias Coppermine, CuMine, A80526
CPU Stepping cC0
Instruction Set x86, MMX, SSE
Original Clock 733 MHz
L1 Code Cache 16 KB
L1 Data Cache 16 KB
L2 Cache 256 KB (On-Die, ATC, Full-Speed)

CPU Physical Info
Package Type 370 Pin FC-PGA
Package Size 4.95 cm x 4.95 cm
Transistors 28.1 million
Process Technology 6M, 0.18 um, CMOS
Die Size 90 mm2
Core Voltage 1.70 V
I/O Voltage 3.3 V
Typical Power 11 - 25 W (depending on clock speed)
Maximum Power 16.0 - 37.5 W (depending on clock speed)

CPU Type Intel Pentium IIIE
CPU Alias Coppermine, CuMine, A80526
CPU Stepping cC0
CPUID Revision 00000686h

CPU Speed
CPU Clock 731.32 MHz (original: 733 MHz)
CPU Multiplier 5.5x
CPU FSB 132.97 MHz (original: 133 MHz)
Memory Bus 132.97 MHz

CPU Cache
L1 Code Cache 16 KB
L1 Data Cache 16 KB
L2 Cache 256 KB (On-Die, ATC, Full-Speed)

Motherboard Properties
Motherboard ID 06/22/2000-693-596-W977E-P6BAT-APC-00
Motherboard Name ECS P6BAT-A+ (2 ISA, 4 PCI, 1 AGP, 3 DIMM)

Chipset Properties
Motherboard Chipset VIA VT82C693A Apollo Pro133
Memory Timings 3-3-3-5 (CL-RCD-RP-RAS)

BIOS Properties
System BIOS Date 06/22/00
Video BIOS Date 98/10/06
Award BIOS Type Award Modular BIOS v4.51PG
Award BIOS Message P6BAT-AP Ver 5.6 06/22/2000
DMI BIOS Version 4.51 PG
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PostPosted: Sun Mar 29, 2009 2:11 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote

Looking on the ECS website (link via the "sticky" above) I get this information for compatible CPUs:
Intel Pentium !!! 750 (256K,100MHz,Socket 370)
Intel Pentium !!! 850 (256K,100MHz,Socket 370)

I seem to have the first one already. The second one would offer only a 13% increase in speed.

However, the existing Pentium IIIE does not use the actual socket 370, but is plugged into something sticking up at right angles to the board. I don't know if this makes any difference.

Thanks.
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D.8080



Joined: 03 Apr 2006
Posts: 1474
Location: Italy

PostPosted: Sun Mar 29, 2009 4:32 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote

Something like this?

http://www.firingsquad.com/hardware/slocket/default.asp

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Do you have any money to invest in a new cheap machine?
Or you just want to have an upgrade?
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viili



Joined: 07 Jun 2005
Posts: 64
Location: Finland

PostPosted: Mon Mar 30, 2009 9:45 am    Post subject: Reply with quote

Very likely any P3 socket370 chip with coppermine core (more than 1.65V core voltage) works in that motherboard, so fastest you can get is 1.13GHz. Fast Slot1 P3:s are rare and expensive and have no other benefits than that you won't need a "Slotket", which you already have.

1.13GHz sSpec SL5QK (rare)
1.00GHz sSpecs SL52R, SL5B3, SL4MF, SL4C8, SL5FQ, SL5DV

Edit: About overclocking, you are already running your memory and chipset at their specified limit, 133MHz, so you'd be overclocking all the other components along with the processor. My guess would be that you'd run into problems after 150MHz, and that'd be mere 825MHz processor speed, and as such not really worth it.
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PostPosted: Tue Mar 31, 2009 10:44 am    Post subject: Reply with quote

The thing that sticks up at 90 degrees does not touch or use the 370 socket at all. So I'm not sure if its something like that, without a picture.

I do not want to invest in a new machine as I do not need one, its just than improving my current old computer only costs a few pounds/dollars to buy the best components.

dume wrote:
Something like this?

www firingsquad com hardware slocket default.asp

-----


Do you have any money to invest in a new cheap machine?
Or you just want to have an upgrade?
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PostPosted: Tue Mar 31, 2009 10:47 am    Post subject: Reply with quote

Thanks, as far as I can see the Pentium IIIE chip I currently have does not physically use the 370 socket - unless this refers to a software thing rather than a hardware thing.

Would the CPUs you have described be pin-identical with a Pentium IIIE, or would other CPUs be please?

Thanks


viili wrote:
Very likely any P3 socket370 chip with coppermine core (more than 1.65V core voltage) works in that motherboard, so fastest you can get is 1.13GHz. Fast Slot1 P3:s are rare and expensive and have no other benefits than that you won't need a "Slotket", which you already have.

1.13GHz sSpec SL5QK (rare)
1.00GHz sSpecs SL52R, SL5B3, SL4MF, SL4C8, SL5FQ, SL5DV

Edit: About overclocking, you are already running your memory and chipset at their specified limit, 133MHz, so you'd be overclocking all the other components along with the processor. My guess would be that you'd run into problems after 150MHz, and that'd be mere 825MHz processor speed, and as such not really worth it.
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hugo929



Joined: 27 Oct 2006
Posts: 6163
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PostPosted: Tue Mar 31, 2009 6:25 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote

the fastest possible CPU it can run is a coppermine PIII 1400.
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Wizzard1



Joined: 05 Nov 2006
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PostPosted: Tue Mar 31, 2009 9:59 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote

There is no coppermine PIII-anything above 1133Mhz. Tualatin PIII are the core revision which allowed speeds up to 1.4Ghz (and 1.5Ghz in Celeron).
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hugo929



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PostPosted: Wed Apr 01, 2009 9:58 am    Post subject: Reply with quote

Wizzard1 wrote:
There is no coppermine PIII-anything above 1133Mhz. Tualatin PIII are the core revision which allowed speeds up to 1.4Ghz (and 1.5Ghz in Celeron).

thanks for correction. my bad, i remember it incorrectly Embarassed

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D.8080



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PostPosted: Wed Apr 01, 2009 11:02 am    Post subject: Reply with quote

There is so much to remember that sometimes something slips in between...
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Marcin



Joined: 02 Jan 2005
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PostPosted: Thu Apr 02, 2009 1:15 am    Post subject: Reply with quote

with FCPGA->FCPGA2 adapter you can put PIII Tualatin 1400 on this motherboard
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MiLToS_666



Joined: 29 Jan 2008
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PostPosted: Thu Apr 02, 2009 2:44 am    Post subject: Reply with quote

As Marcin recommended, I've installed a PIII-S 1.4GHz in my old QDI Advance 9 motherboard last year. It's also using the VIA Apollo Pro 133 chipset like your motherboard and it will most probably work fine too. I used one of those cheap FCPGA->FCPGA2 adapters from "Lin-Lin" found on eBay.
If you need any info with this procedure I can help you.
It might need a BIOS update too, or just microcode update within the BIOS to recognize the new CPU.
If you're not bored to read, have a look on this topic, you'll find my posts too.

http://discussions.hardwarecentral.com/showthread.php?t=172281

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