Originally posted by: dnuggett
Am I correct in thinking that the fastest 478 proc is a P4 2.8 Ghz? I have a board that accepts 478 pin processors and want to make sure I add the fastest proc available. Thanks!
Originally posted by: Arkaign
Originally posted by: dnuggett
Am I correct in thinking that the fastest 478 proc is a P4 2.8 Ghz? I have a board that accepts 478 pin processors and want to make sure I add the fastest proc available. Thanks!
Look up the model # of your mobo. A lot of them are limited to 533Fsb, in which case your best bet is the rare original 3.06Ghz P4 Northwood. Beyond that, a 3.0 or 3.2C is the best bet. Prescott Socket 478s are notoriously hot, and a lot of mobos behave very strangely with them even if they do support them.
Originally posted by: dnuggett
Originally posted by: Arkaign
Originally posted by: dnuggett
Am I correct in thinking that the fastest 478 proc is a P4 2.8 Ghz? I have a board that accepts 478 pin processors and want to make sure I add the fastest proc available. Thanks!
Look up the model # of your mobo. A lot of them are limited to 533Fsb, in which case your best bet is the rare original 3.06Ghz P4 Northwood. Beyond that, a 3.0 or 3.2C is the best bet. Prescott Socket 478s are notoriously hot, and a lot of mobos behave very strangely with them even if they do support them.
It's a mobo for an Evo D510u SFF. It originally had a 1.4 Celeron FCPGA-2. They make a 478 board for it, and I'll pick it up tonight. My gut is telling me it's limited to 533. In any event I guess I should recant my original statement. I want to balance speed with high availability. Since it's a SFF I don't want a barn burner. The machine will likely be on 24/7.
Originally posted by: dnuggett
Ok so I just found out, it's a 400FSB. What's the fastest proc at this FSB? I am assumig it's not one of the heat mongers.
