- Oct 13, 1999
- 22,377
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I've heard that some of the newer SiS chipsets have working AGP/PCI locks (depending on motherboard manufacturer implementation). For instance, I've heard that the SiS 655FX chipset is such a beast, plus perhaps some of their new A64 chipsets.
I was wondering if lower-end chipsets have a working AGP/PCI lock. For instance, though I've experienced conflicting results, Asus claims that the P4S800 motherboard (SiS 648FX) has an AGP/PCI lock.
I just got a Shuttle SS56G mini system that uses the SiS 661FX chipset for the P4. It has overclocking features in the BIOS such as Vcore to 1.6V (typical limit of SiS chipset boards), 100-255MHz FSB maximum, memory voltage, chipset voltage, AGP voltage. No mention of AGP/PCI speed in BIOS, though I've had Nforce2 Ultra 400 boards that don't mention it in BIOS. Anyone know?
I was wondering if lower-end chipsets have a working AGP/PCI lock. For instance, though I've experienced conflicting results, Asus claims that the P4S800 motherboard (SiS 648FX) has an AGP/PCI lock.
I just got a Shuttle SS56G mini system that uses the SiS 661FX chipset for the P4. It has overclocking features in the BIOS such as Vcore to 1.6V (typical limit of SiS chipset boards), 100-255MHz FSB maximum, memory voltage, chipset voltage, AGP voltage. No mention of AGP/PCI speed in BIOS, though I've had Nforce2 Ultra 400 boards that don't mention it in BIOS. Anyone know?