Upgraded my AMD Super Socket 7 system. Replaced my K6-III 400MHz with an AMD K6-2+ 550MHz.
My ASUS P5A-B Rev. 1.03 has no issues with it. Currently checking how much I can overcloclock it. 617MHz reached. Memtest detects the CPU incorrectly as K6-III. At least it is Memtest-stable for now.
#AMD #Overclocking #SuperSocket7 #K6-2 #K6-III #ASUS #retrocomputing

Clever Motherboard Hack Brings Late 90’s Motherboard Into the Early 2000’s

Some people look at specifications as a requirement, and others look at them as a challenge. You're reading this on Hackaday, so you know where [Necroware] falls. In the video below the break, you'll see how he takes a common mid-to-late 90's motherboard and takes it well past its spec sheet.

[Necroware] does what all soldering iron ads think people do with soldering ironsHaving already started with replacing the Real Time Clock with his own creation, [Necroware] looked for other opportunities to make the Asus P/I-P55TP4XEG more capable than Asus did. And, he succeeded. Realizing that the motherboard has the ability to have an external voltage regulator board, [Necroware] made one so that the Socket 7 board could supply more than a single voltage to the CPU- the very thing keeping him from upgrading from a Pentium 133 to a Pentium MMX 200.

While the upgrade was partially successful, a deep dive into the Socket 7 and Super Socket 7 documentation helped him realize the need for a pullup resistor on a strategic clocking pin. Then, [Necroware] went full Turbo and smashed this author's favorite single core CPU of all time into the socket: the AMD K6-2 450, a CPU well beyond the original capabilities of the board.

It really goes to show that, of course, It's All About The Pentiums. Thanks to [BaldPower] for the doing the needful and dropping this great hack into the Tip Line!

#retrocomputing #amd #asus #asusmotherboard #k62 #pip55tp4xeg #pullupresistor #socket7 #supersocket7

Clever Motherboard Hack Brings Late 90’s Motherboard Into The Early 2000’s

Some people look at specifications as a requirement, and others look at them as a challenge. You’re reading this on Hackaday, so you know where [Necroware] falls. In the video below the break…

Hackaday