i want a turbo button on my computer

ElFenix

Elite Member
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Mar 20, 2000
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be nice to switch it easily from underclocked and quiet to overclocked and beastly.
 
Jun 14, 2003
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i remember the old computers at school had buttons marked turbo........they were win 98 at the most, probably win 95 era. turbo never seemed to do anything though
 

shilala

Lifer
Oct 5, 2004
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Try Trixx.
There's a bunch of Asus utilities that do just that.
What board are you running?
 

Zim Hosein

Super Moderator | Elite Member
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Nov 27, 1999
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8 to 12MHz via a Turbo Button, oh the memories! :eek:
 

ElFenix

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Mar 20, 2000
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Originally posted by: otispunkmeyer
i remember the old computers at school had buttons marked turbo........they were win 98 at the most, probably win 95 era. turbo never seemed to do anything though

it was supposed to go from a normal 8MHz up to whatever your DX or DX-2 could run at, iirc (well, it worked with SX processors too, unlike today's celerons which don't clock throttle).

i'm not sure it did anything either.

remember the old LED displays that would give the MHz of the processor on them? always fun to set that to 666. :laugh:
 

FoBoT

No Lifer
Apr 30, 2001
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fobot.com
old school

the worst part about those cases was jumpering the LED correctly for your cpu
seems pretty crazy now
 

ElFenix

Elite Member
Super Moderator
Mar 20, 2000
102,402
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Originally posted by: shilala
Try Trixx.
There's a bunch of Asus utilities that do just that.
What board are you running?

software isn't manly.
 

Kelemvor

Lifer
May 23, 2002
16,928
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My 486 SX25 had a turbo button. I don't think I ever turned it off. Not sure why anyone would unless an old DOS game ran too fast in Turbo mode. heh.
 

DaTT

Garage Moderator
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Feb 13, 2003
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Originally posted by: ElFenix
Originally posted by: shilala
Try Trixx.
There's a bunch of Asus utilities that do just that.
What board are you running?

software isn't manly.

lol :thumbsup:
 

shilala

Lifer
Oct 5, 2004
11,437
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Originally posted by: ElFenix
Originally posted by: shilala
Try Trixx.
There's a bunch of Asus utilities that do just that.
What board are you running?

software isn't manly.

Good point.
How's about a hurst shifter tied back to the button on your desktop?
Fair compromise?
 

glugglug

Diamond Member
Jun 9, 2002
5,340
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I used to have my K6-166 set so the turbo switch went between 208 (stable overclock) and 250 (max overclock).
225 was stable too, but 208 was faster because of bus speed (and L2 cache access thru the bus).
 

scottish144

Banned
Jul 20, 2005
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I have an old Win 3.1 before-pentium acient PoS that had a turbo button. Didn't make much difference in performance though. Granted, I was only 8 years old at the time, and my memory of it is vague.
 

Auryg

Platinum Member
Dec 28, 2003
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Our teachers at school always used to scold us for hitting the turbo button :(
 

FrozenCanadian

Senior member
Dec 19, 2005
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It would be nice to have a Turbo button on the case that turned on/off AMD's Cool'n'Quiet or whatever Intels is.
 

DAGTA

Diamond Member
Oct 9, 1999
8,172
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Originally posted by: FoBoT
old school

the worst part about those cases was jumpering the LED correctly for your cpu
seems pretty crazy now

Ah, but the best part was that you could wire those LED displays to say things like 266MHZ when you were running a 486. ;)
 

imported_goku

Diamond Member
Mar 28, 2004
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Originally posted by: DAGTA
Originally posted by: FoBoT
old school

the worst part about those cases was jumpering the LED correctly for your cpu
seems pretty crazy now

Ah, but the best part was that you could wire those LED displays to say things like 266MHZ when you were running a 486. ;)

What did you have to do? I've got a case like that, only thing I noticed was the fact there are a bunch of jumpers at the back...
 

suse920

Diamond Member
Feb 7, 2005
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that would be sick... with sound effect of course.


hmmm pr0n needs downloading. i think you know what that mean!!!!
*push*
WWWWOOOOOMMMM VRRRAAAAAWWWMMMMMMM
 

DAGTA

Diamond Member
Oct 9, 1999
8,172
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Originally posted by: goku
Originally posted by: DAGTA
Originally posted by: FoBoT
old school

the worst part about those cases was jumpering the LED correctly for your cpu
seems pretty crazy now

Ah, but the best part was that you could wire those LED displays to say things like 266MHZ when you were running a 486. ;)

What did you have to do? I've got a case like that, only thing I noticed was the fact there are a bunch of jumpers at the back...

I couldn't tell you the jumper configuration now even if you have the exact same case I had, which I doubt. Disconnect it so that the jumper settings don't actually change anything on your motherboard/cpu and then play around with the settings. The LED (at least on the old cases) is not tied to the actual cpu speed, it's just a reading from the jumper settings.