All the Celerons run @ 66MHz FSB speed so just divide the chip rating by 66 to get the multiplier (that's why it's a multiplier), e.g. 633/66 = 9.591 which Intel calls a 9.5 multiplier.
All the Celerons run @ 66MHz FSB speed so just divide the chip rating by 66 to get the multiplier (that's why it's a multiplier), e.g. 633/66 = 9.591 which Intel calls a 9.5 multiplier.
All the Celerons run @ 66MHz FSB speed so just divide the chip rating by 66 to get the multiplier (that's why it's a multiplier), e.g. 633/66 = 9.591 which Intel calls a 9.5 multiplier.
9.5??? Isn't that rather high???
How high do multipliers go on the average motherboard?
Since Intel locks the multiplier, could one set the M/B at 66mz
and use any multiplier???
Greg
Remember anything ending in 33 or 66 is a repeating decimal.
So it is in 9.5 as has been said before, I'm just bored because I'm at work with almost nothing to do...
The better question is why do you care? The motherboard probably won't care at all. If it supports Coppermine, it will likely support the high multiplier, regardless of what your jumper or BIOS max settings are.
basically, if your motherboard is jumperless, it will have to run at the multiplier. And, if they make celerons with a lot higher multipliers, i bet all that is needed is a quick bios flash
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