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athlon thunderbird overclocking???

Brackus2

Member
Hey everyone,

I was just wondering ifanyone has done much overclocking with the athlon thunderbirdseries...

Mostly in the 1.2-1.4 ghz range I guess, I dont think they made them higher than that, or if theydid they are hard to grab... anyway, I am trying to get around 1.6-2.0 ghz outta oneof these things... possible, and if so, what do you need???

Thanks,

Dustin McCulloch
 
I had a 1.2GHz that I O/C'd to 1.33GHz. (Light O/Cing)

They were hot CPUs, but my suggestion is that if you're going to spend the money on cooling for it, may as well buy an Athlon XP CPU that'll get you guaranteed speeds.

Think that'd you get 1.6GHz max on air and that's if you're lucky.
 
Originally posted by: Brackus2
Hey everyone,

I was just wondering ifanyone has done much overclocking with the athlon thunderbirdseries...

Mostly in the 1.2-1.4 ghz range I guess, I dont think they made them higher than that, or if theydid they are hard to grab... anyway, I am trying to get around 1.6-2.0 ghz outta oneof these things... possible, and if so, what do you need???

Thanks,

Dustin McCulloch

One of the most popular OCed CPUs at their time was Thunderbird 1GHz with FSB200. It could easily get to 1.33GHz. (again, 'their' time) Let's say T-bird 1GHz is like 2.4C or 2.6C this day. Other T-bird, such as 1.2G or 1.33G, are comparable to be 3.2C. OCed 2.4C/2.6C and Non-OCed 3.2C have almost same max speed. Same thing to T-bird. 1.33G T-bird could hardly reach 1.4G, like P4 3.2C can hardly reach 3.4G. I think even Palomino cannot reach 1.6-2.0GHz easily.
 
I had a 1.1 that ran @ 1266 for several years @ 1.89v (and still running). You'll need some conductive ink or a window defogger repair kit to join the L2 bridges. Then you'll need a decent HSF. Don't plan on getting more than 1.4GHz out of one, however. They're darn hot.
 
Both my 1.0GHz and 1.2GHz Thunderbirds came unlocked. That or my KT133A motherboard unlocked it for me. I didn't have to join any bridges.

On the side note, the place selling the CPU was smart. They put the warranty sticker over the specific bridges!
 
I had a 1.0 axia-y stepping chip that ran at 1.6ghz and a 1.33 ayhja-y that ran 1.66ghz. Both watercooled and ran on a volt modded board for 2.0v+. At 1.85v (max stock vcore) I'd get around 1.5 off the 1.0 and 1.6 on the 1.33. If you haven't bought the chips already look for these specific steppings as they were the "magic" chips. Good luck.

axia, axiar, ayhja, ayhjar
 
My Tbird 1GHz 266fsb AXIA would overclock to around 1.38GHz at 1.85V. Tbirds stopped at 1.4GHz. I used the pencil trick on the L1 bridges to unlock it, worked great and lasted a long time.
 
Originally posted by: ELP
I have a 1.2 Mhz (133 FSB) AXIA running at 1.38 Mhz currently.

1.2 MHz to 1.38 MHz? One hell of an overclock. No wonder those Tbird 1.4GHz chips were space heaters 🙂.
 
My 1Ghz 200FSB AXIA 'Y' '9', pencil tricked, did 1.57Ghz on Air, 1.53 Stable and would post @1.6Ghz.

She was special. I still have it.
 
I to am looking to overclock my Athlon Thunderbird 1.1GHz system with 512MB Kingston SDRAM PC133.

I am new to the whole overclcoking thing and need to know pretty specific steps to do this. Where can I go to find this info (if it exsists) or can someone give me the details via the board here?

TIA
 
Originally posted by: treckmey
I to am looking to overclock my Athlon Thunderbird 1.1GHz system with 512MB Kingston SDRAM PC133.

I am new to the whole overclcoking thing and need to know pretty specific steps to do this. Where can I go to find this info (if it exsists) or can someone give me the details via the board here?

TIA

Depends if your CPU is multiplier locked and if your motherboard is able to unlock it for you. What you can do is increment the multiplier by .5 at a time to overclock.
 
Originally posted by: treckmey
I to am looking to overclock my Athlon Thunderbird 1.1GHz system with 512MB Kingston SDRAM PC133.

I am new to the whole overclcoking thing and need to know pretty specific steps to do this. Where can I go to find this info (if it exsists) or can someone give me the details via the board here?

TIA

Let me know your motherboard model and make. Then I can help.

Are you confident with hardware? If we are to do this properly then we need to unlock the L1 bridges with the 'pencil trick'. Do a google on 'L1 Pencil trick'

In fact, I did it for you. This is a good L1 guide and also skims overclocking in general.
 
Thanks for the offer of help.

Mobo is ABIT KT7 RAID running the latest firmware.

Yes, I am fairly comfortable with hardware. I built this box about 2 years ago. I also have an Athlon T-Bird 800 Mhz chip that maybe I should "play" with first.

I will read over the article and get back to ya with questions.

TR
 
Looks simple enough.... I am assuming this procedure can be done on my 800Mhz processor. I think I would rather expirement on it first.

Also..

<<Make sure you use a good cooling solution, such as the Silver Orb by Thermaltake or an equivalent, as the CPU will need to have better cooling in an overclocked state. Use thermal grease if you have it, preferably a silver-based compound. You can see some good stuff at www.arcticsilver.com. It is messy, but it is very necessary when you are overclocking your CPU, as it makes a seal with the cooling solution for better heat dissipation. >>

Is this necessary. Right now everything is stock cooling. I know that the VIA chipset has the ability to watch the temps through it's software. What should the temp range be for both the 800 and 1.1Ghz CPU's?

 
If you overclock, you generate more heat. This is one area you cannot ignore.

The TBrids are also quite toasty, especially when you have them at 1.5Ghz+ like I did. They are cranking 80-90 watts of heat and they need to be tamed.

Download VIA hardware monitor to check the socket temps, but be aware that this value is often quite a few degrees off the actual CPU value, e.g. your CPU is ALWAYS hotter than the VIA HWM will report.
 
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