Yes, you can, assuming you have adequate cooling and a motherboard that will let you get there. Read some overclocking guides and you'll see the process you take, you do it a little at a time, and test for stability and temperatures.
Yes, you can, assuming you have adequate cooling and a motherboard that will let you get there. Read some overclocking guides and you'll see the process you take, you do it a little at a time, and test for stability and temperatures.
Yes, you can, assuming you have adequate cooling and a motherboard that will let you get there. Read some overclocking guides and you'll see the process you take, you do it a little at a time, and test for stability and temperatures.
That depends on a lot of things, including luck. It depends on your temperatures, motherboard, airflow, and just how good of a chip you got, some can't be overclocked much at all.
That depends on a lot of things, including luck. It depends on your temperatures, motherboard, airflow, and just how good of a chip you got, some can't be overclocked much at all.
Yes they can. I guess the Pentium 6xxx series runs on 266Mhz FSB . You can just set the FSB to 333Mhz (keeping in mind your memory multiplier so that you don't outrun your RAM speed,though memory timings can be relaxed but not advised) and set the multiplier lower. Hunt and peck for the max stable speed and you are done.
I have done Pentium E5xxx from FSB 200 to FSB 333Mhz. And lowered the multipliers to get OC upto 4.25 Ghz on my old E5300.
Yes they can. I guess the Pentium 6xxx series runs on 266Mhz FSB . You can just set the FSB to 333Mhz (keeping in mind your memory multiplier so that you don't outrun your RAM speed,though memory timings can be relaxed but not advised) and set the multiplier lower. Hunt and peck for the max stable speed and you are done.
I have done Pentium E5xxx from FSB 200 to FSB 333Mhz. And lowered the multipliers to get OC upto 4.25 Ghz on my old E5300.