1.6a or XP for oc'ing?

Haunter9X

Member
Apr 19, 2001
47
0
0
I am currently running an old celeron 300a @ 464MHz with 128mb of cas 2 memory. I really need to upgrade and I think it's finally time to bite the bullet. I must say that in the three years since I bought this set up it's performed quite admirably and solidly for being oc'd it's entire life. So, I'm tempted to buy a pretested 1.6a combo that runs at 2.2-2.4ghz as I know Intel chips can last at higher speeds. However, I've noticed that Athlons consistently beat the p4 processors at non oc'd speeds. Any suggestions on how I should resolve this dillema? Also, what motherboard is best for XP or P4 oc'ing? I've been looking at the Abit AT7/IT7 because of the plethora of ports that I want. Any help on this matter is greatly appreciated.
-Haunter
 

dougp

Diamond Member
May 3, 2002
7,909
4
0
thugz, remember that when I'm PMing u on Friday when I get mine and it don't go above 2.0 :D
 

oldfart

Lifer
Dec 2, 1999
10,207
0
0
Thugs is right. While most wont do his insane overclock, 1.6A @ 2.2 is a given. 2.4 is pretty easy and common. Over that...luck of the draw.
 

Haunter9X

Member
Apr 19, 2001
47
0
0
Thanks guys... The AMDs seem to require more physical work to oc, which I'd rather do through a bios. Newegg seems to be fairly reputable from what I've read. Are they still the ones to go with? I'm not so much concerned about the price as getting a good chip from a good company. Also, on the heatsink, is the thermaltake volcano 7 worth the money? Or would I be better off with an alpha w/ the 80cfm delta fan?
 

Steppy76

Junior Member
May 1, 2002
14
0
0
Originally posted by: CubicZirconia
The AMDs seem to require more physical work to oc

Get a jumperless mobo, like the 8kha+ (or its newer versions) and everything is done in bios.


I believe the "physical" work he's talking about is the unlocking process.
 

Blain

Lifer
Oct 9, 1999
23,643
3
81
The lowest price for a 1.6GHz listed at Pricewatch is about $137 shipped from Googlegear.
Advanced Design of Kentucky has a 2.4+GHz OC'd Northwood for $206 (2% discount for e-check), plus shipping charge ($??). Their OC'd CPU's come with the stock Intel HS/fan and 1yr. warranty on the OC along with the Intel 3yr. I guess the 3yr. is worthless because of the OC'd state of the CPU. ADK says that they won't use core voltage past .3 over stock.

Is the $75ish premium worth it for these Northwoods, or is it just a waste?
 

jsm0net

Junior Member
May 22, 2002
9
0
0
Originally posted by: Blain
The lowest price for a 1.6GHz listed at Pricewatch is about $137 shipped from Googlegear.
Advanced Design of Kentucky has a 2.4+GHz OC'd Northwood for $206 (2% discount for e-check), plus shipping charge ($??). Their OC'd CPU's come with the stock Intel HS/fan and 1yr. warranty on the OC along with the Intel 3yr. I guess the 3yr. is worthless because of the OC'd state of the CPU. ADK says that they won't use core voltage past .3 over stock.

Is the $75ish premium worth it for these Northwoods, or is it just a waste?

no, not at all. save the 75 bucks. just get a 1.6a, a good mobo, some good ram (corsair is my preference) and clock it yourself. without pushing the core voltage too much you can acheive 2.4ghz without much problem. I did it on a p4b266 using crucial ddr2100. I'm thinking i should hit 2.6 or so stable with the ddr3000 i'm getting in a few days.
 

Blain

Lifer
Oct 9, 1999
23,643
3
81
Thanks for the info. Are you using the stock Intel HS/fan?
It looks like these 1.6a's are the OC kings :)
 

oldfart

Lifer
Dec 2, 1999
10,207
0
0
I've built two 1.6A's. Both are running @ 2.4 GHz stock HS/Fan. One needs 1.65 Vcore, the other 1.675. Both will do 2.2 GHz stock Vcore. People have got chips that will do 2.4 @ stock Vcore (I'm never that lucky). I would not spend the extra $75. For ram, go with Samsung PC2700. For a mobo, you want an Intel i845 based board. Be sure it supports a PCI/AGP lock, and 3:4 and/or 4:5 mem ratio (845G only) @ high FSB speeds. This will get you maximum performance out of the system.
 

Blain

Lifer
Oct 9, 1999
23,643
3
81
Thanks.
I was planning on an Abit IT7 Max for the lock and other onboard goodies.
The memory I was thinking about was some 2700-3000, Kingmax, Mushkin, Corsair or Samsung. I don't plan on any crazy-wild FSB, but I want the fastest memory settings I can get.
 

oldfart

Lifer
Dec 2, 1999
10,207
0
0
There was a test done recently and the Samsung PC2700 came out on top. Kingmax was on the bottom.
 

Haunter9X

Member
Apr 19, 2001
47
0
0
Yah, how are those IT7s for overclocking? They look really nice in the specs, but would issues arise out of having usb 2.0 on the board with the max stable fsb i can reach? If not, who makes a board with the 845G on it? I've also been looking at the abit bd7r, but again I'm hesitant about the stability of the raid controller with a upped fsb on it...
-Haunter9x
 

CoDerEd

Senior member
Jul 10, 2001
429
0
0
i see that abit and msi make board for 845G

bd7 has lock pci/agp so don't worry about the stability
 

sonoran

Member
May 9, 2002
174
0
0
Originally posted by: Haunter9X
I am currently running an old celeron 300a @ 464MHz with 128mb of cas 2 memory. I really need to upgrade and I think it's finally time to bite the bullet. I must say that in the three years since I bought this set up it's performed quite admirably and solidly for being oc'd it's entire life. So, I'm tempted to buy a pretested 1.6a combo that runs at 2.2-2.4ghz as I know Intel chips can last at higher speeds. However, I've noticed that Athlons consistently beat the p4 processors at non oc'd speeds. Any suggestions on how I should resolve this dillema? Also, what motherboard is best for XP or P4 oc'ing? I've been looking at the Abit AT7/IT7 because of the plethora of ports that I want. Any help on this matter is greatly appreciated.
-Haunter

Why not get an overclocked 1.6a for now, then in a year, using the same motherboard, you can upgrade to an overclocked 3GHz on the cheap? :) And BTW, the 1.6's and 3.0's are essentially made from the same materials (same silicon wafers, same chemical processes, etc - primarily just a different circuit mask). As long as you don't seriously overheat the processor, I'd expect it to last as well as your 300a has.