09-06-2010, 02:06 AM
Hi,
is it possible to add athlon-xp support for this board?
gigabyte states that it will support upto athlon 1400, the fastest cpu supported by this 100MHz chipset. I have an athlon-xp1600+ (ie 1400 clock 100MHz clock) that should work but it is not recognised.
It's currently kitted out with a 700 meg athon so the upgrade would be great.
I'd also like to be able to set Vcore (non adjustable on this auto detect bios) . The xp mobile will run as low as 1.3V and while I have run these things at 1.75V for o/c I'd rather not abuse it if I don't need to.
I've got a few ideas about doing the mod but have don't have a full enough disassembly of amibios yet, and realised maybe I'm reinventing the wheel.
http://www.giga-byte.co.uk/products/prod...id=1364#sp
http://www.cpu-upgrade.com/mb-Gigabyte/GA-7IXE4.html
It is running the FAd latest BIOS release above. It's an AMIBIOS.
Is this doable?
BTW this mobo is useful for hardware reasons, it has two ISA slots that are needed for special hardware interfaces. Otherwise I would not bother. (Apart from the fun of it.)
is it possible to add athlon-xp support for this board?
gigabyte states that it will support upto athlon 1400, the fastest cpu supported by this 100MHz chipset. I have an athlon-xp1600+ (ie 1400 clock 100MHz clock) that should work but it is not recognised.
It's currently kitted out with a 700 meg athon so the upgrade would be great.
I'd also like to be able to set Vcore (non adjustable on this auto detect bios) . The xp mobile will run as low as 1.3V and while I have run these things at 1.75V for o/c I'd rather not abuse it if I don't need to.
I've got a few ideas about doing the mod but have don't have a full enough disassembly of amibios yet, and realised maybe I'm reinventing the wheel.
http://www.giga-byte.co.uk/products/prod...id=1364#sp
http://www.cpu-upgrade.com/mb-Gigabyte/GA-7IXE4.html
It is running the FAd latest BIOS release above. It's an AMIBIOS.
Is this doable?
BTW this mobo is useful for hardware reasons, it has two ISA slots that are needed for special hardware interfaces. Otherwise I would not bother. (Apart from the fun of it.)