![]() 11/10/2017 at 22:38 • Filed to: retro computers | ![]() | ![]() |
Of course, it’s not much heat, seeing as it’s a pair of old Celeron 366s (Nibby-bait!), and I’m pretty sure my other computers are why I haven’t had to turn the real heat on, but hey.
![]() 11/10/2017 at 22:57 |
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I miss Abit. The BP6 was a hero for us all (though I had a BX6 Rev 2).
![]() 11/10/2017 at 23:13 |
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I thought the best value was the 300A, that was crazy overclockable.
![]() 11/10/2017 at 23:26 |
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Depends on how crazy you’re going, I’m going a bit crazier than 450 MHz. ;)
So, 300As were basically guaranteed 450.
333s could usually hit 500 without too much problem. This is what I really wanted, and I planned on aiming for ~103 FSB or so to get 515.
366s... well, getting over 500 wasn’t guaranteed, but mine with a bit of an overvolt (running at 2.10 V, 2.00 V being the stock voltage) seem to be holding stable at 517...
![]() 11/11/2017 at 00:05 |
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Serious question, why are erethium and bitcoin miners so worried about electricity cost? Just run it in the winter and heat your house, plus you get your crypto as a bonus!
![]() 11/11/2017 at 00:08 |
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I had a pair of late 366s which both did 550 no problem.
![]() 11/11/2017 at 05:13 |
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Jealous, because IIRC mine don’t even make it out of the BIOS at that speed, even at 2.30 V.
![]() 11/11/2017 at 05:14 |
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A lot of them are running it as a business in server farms, I think, is part of the problem.