- May 21, 2006
- 271
- 2
- 81
I upgraded my main machine to Core2 in 2007.
Prior to that I was running a dual socket 370 board (Abit VP6) that let's face it, could run anything on XP just fine except modern games. I spent mega-hours tweaking the chipset with H.Oda's utility and an old program from George Breese that I got to work fine on XP. With lapped coolers I had a modest OC that was pretty good for a 133MHz FSB (147). I adjusted my running services and progs, got Rivatuner to do its stuff, and had Oblivion running pretty nicely @1280x1024 on my trusty 6800GT (modded to Ultra speeds). I even found a great IDE tweak hidden in the chipset datasheets that got my drives to deliver better speeds than those same drives on a much more modern Core2 chipset.
It was a heck of a lot of fun! I had to chart a lot of territory, especially since I got the dual 370 in... 2006!... way much later than the heyday of the VP6, so there were a lot of broken links when searching the net.
My new board, now old by AT standards, has been fun but it has been a question of adjusting bios settings and, well, that's about it! Boring!
So I have built a second PC, this time an Abit VH6HT, single-socket 370 with a nice, cool Tualatin 1.4Ghz that I can overclock very nicely. Hooked both machines up to a KVM and... I now spend more time with my superhacked Win98SE socket 370 playing legacy games than I do on the Core2.
I enjoy the suffering of endless tweaking than I do simply buying performance. Anyone else as weird as I am?
Prior to that I was running a dual socket 370 board (Abit VP6) that let's face it, could run anything on XP just fine except modern games. I spent mega-hours tweaking the chipset with H.Oda's utility and an old program from George Breese that I got to work fine on XP. With lapped coolers I had a modest OC that was pretty good for a 133MHz FSB (147). I adjusted my running services and progs, got Rivatuner to do its stuff, and had Oblivion running pretty nicely @1280x1024 on my trusty 6800GT (modded to Ultra speeds). I even found a great IDE tweak hidden in the chipset datasheets that got my drives to deliver better speeds than those same drives on a much more modern Core2 chipset.
It was a heck of a lot of fun! I had to chart a lot of territory, especially since I got the dual 370 in... 2006!... way much later than the heyday of the VP6, so there were a lot of broken links when searching the net.
My new board, now old by AT standards, has been fun but it has been a question of adjusting bios settings and, well, that's about it! Boring!
So I have built a second PC, this time an Abit VH6HT, single-socket 370 with a nice, cool Tualatin 1.4Ghz that I can overclock very nicely. Hooked both machines up to a KVM and... I now spend more time with my superhacked Win98SE socket 370 playing legacy games than I do on the Core2.
I enjoy the suffering of endless tweaking than I do simply buying performance. Anyone else as weird as I am?