First of all, I apologize for the lack of real pics, but I don?t have a camera so use your imagination.
You may ask, why overclock the TI-82? Well first of all, it is a TI-82 which is something of an older model. It is particularly slow at generating circles and graphing in general. Certain games such as gauntlet and Tetris aren?t hard enough either. If you?ve used up a lot of ram storing programs, this will also slow you down. The TI-82 doesn?t have the fast scroll option either, so if you?re going through a long program it takes forever.
Materials
1 TI-82 Calculator
1 NPO Capacitor
Dremel
1 2-way switch
Screw driver
Wire
Soldering iron
Knife
Total cost: $2 (I had all the other tools already and the TI-82 was [edit]found[/edit])
In actuality, we are not overclocking the CPU; we are just fixing a bottleneck within the calculator by replacing a capacitor. I ordered the capacitor from this site, http://leaven.com/ti/ti82.htm, and it also has some basic instructions. It cost me $2 and I risked it by sending cash. They claim it will make your calculator 4X faster. Yay! Finally you can keep up with the nerdy ti-92 crowd.
First I unscrewed the two screws on the rear of the calculator and the backup battery screw, and then removed the back plate with several hundred pounds of pressure. I seriously thought I was gonna break it. Behind the back plate, there is a little bit of foil. I took that out, and never put it back in. Then I unscrewed the LCD. It?s connected to the chip by a ribbon, and it just sort of flops around after you unscrew it. Next I located the C7 capacitor in this diagram, http://leaven.com/ti/gifs/ti82.jpg and removed it with the soldering iron. I decided to use the 2-way switch methods to throttle speed, so it?s not as easy as just replacing it. I soldered on wire to the old location of the capacitor and attached one end to the center connector on the switch. Both capacitors share the other wire in a dual soldering job. This can be seen in this diagram. http://leaven.com/ti/gifs/switch.jpg Now I dremeled a small square out of the right side of the calculator, next to the + key. I affixed the switch here, with the help of the drill Dremel bit and the screws. Next, I closed it up and turned it on. It actually isn?t broken. It functions in both on and off positions.
Benchmarking:
I used this simple program to bench it:
:0 -> X
:LBl [A]
:X +1 -> X
:Goto A
and timed it for 5 minutes. At the end of the trials, I discovered that the value of X was relatively the same with both capacitors. Interesting. Maybe this improvement frees up more bandwidth for the video card and not the CPU. So I benched it with this program next:
:0 -> X
:LBl [A]
:Circle(1,1,1
:ClrDraw
:X + 1 ->X
:Goto A
Again, I found the X values to be strangely similar. I left it installed anyway and one day I hit some kid in the arm with it and the switch broke off.
Conclusions:
This mod does not improve the speed of the TI-82. Although, when people ask you why you have an extra switch on your calculator, you can tell them about the mod and they?ll know you?re l33t. Kinda like ricing.
In retrospect, I should not have bought into the hype and stuck with traditional tweaking methods, such as OC?ing the CPU, peltier cooling, or maybe adding some SDRAM.
You may ask, why overclock the TI-82? Well first of all, it is a TI-82 which is something of an older model. It is particularly slow at generating circles and graphing in general. Certain games such as gauntlet and Tetris aren?t hard enough either. If you?ve used up a lot of ram storing programs, this will also slow you down. The TI-82 doesn?t have the fast scroll option either, so if you?re going through a long program it takes forever.
Materials
1 TI-82 Calculator
1 NPO Capacitor
Dremel
1 2-way switch
Screw driver
Wire
Soldering iron
Knife
Total cost: $2 (I had all the other tools already and the TI-82 was [edit]found[/edit])
In actuality, we are not overclocking the CPU; we are just fixing a bottleneck within the calculator by replacing a capacitor. I ordered the capacitor from this site, http://leaven.com/ti/ti82.htm, and it also has some basic instructions. It cost me $2 and I risked it by sending cash. They claim it will make your calculator 4X faster. Yay! Finally you can keep up with the nerdy ti-92 crowd.
First I unscrewed the two screws on the rear of the calculator and the backup battery screw, and then removed the back plate with several hundred pounds of pressure. I seriously thought I was gonna break it. Behind the back plate, there is a little bit of foil. I took that out, and never put it back in. Then I unscrewed the LCD. It?s connected to the chip by a ribbon, and it just sort of flops around after you unscrew it. Next I located the C7 capacitor in this diagram, http://leaven.com/ti/gifs/ti82.jpg and removed it with the soldering iron. I decided to use the 2-way switch methods to throttle speed, so it?s not as easy as just replacing it. I soldered on wire to the old location of the capacitor and attached one end to the center connector on the switch. Both capacitors share the other wire in a dual soldering job. This can be seen in this diagram. http://leaven.com/ti/gifs/switch.jpg Now I dremeled a small square out of the right side of the calculator, next to the + key. I affixed the switch here, with the help of the drill Dremel bit and the screws. Next, I closed it up and turned it on. It actually isn?t broken. It functions in both on and off positions.
Benchmarking:
I used this simple program to bench it:
:0 -> X
:LBl [A]
:X +1 -> X
:Goto A
and timed it for 5 minutes. At the end of the trials, I discovered that the value of X was relatively the same with both capacitors. Interesting. Maybe this improvement frees up more bandwidth for the video card and not the CPU. So I benched it with this program next:
:0 -> X
:LBl [A]
:Circle(1,1,1
:ClrDraw
:X + 1 ->X
:Goto A
Again, I found the X values to be strangely similar. I left it installed anyway and one day I hit some kid in the arm with it and the switch broke off.
Conclusions:
This mod does not improve the speed of the TI-82. Although, when people ask you why you have an extra switch on your calculator, you can tell them about the mod and they?ll know you?re l33t. Kinda like ricing.
In retrospect, I should not have bought into the hype and stuck with traditional tweaking methods, such as OC?ing the CPU, peltier cooling, or maybe adding some SDRAM.