First of all, THROW AWAY THAT ARTICLE! Second of all, the Triton series was 430 chipsets like the FX, HX, and TX. Third of all, the BX was a 440 chipset for PII's. Forth, we need to know what motherboard you have.
1.) Tom's article ignored the fact that most "non-compatable" boards were compatable with the K6-2 via a simple BIOS update.
2.) Tom's article suggested that voltages higher than 2.5v would kill the CPU, but I've tested K6-2 400's for YEARS on 2.8v boards without damaging them, you just had to use better-than-stock cooling.
3.) At least 1 of Tom's articles suggested you use an expensive adapter on a board that could support the CPU well without the adapter.
4.) No Intel brand boards support K6-2's at all in BIOS. Most other brands do.
5.) The 430 part is a given for Intel Socket 5/7 chipsets, the FX/HX/VX/TX part determines an important attribute of the chipset; which RAM is supported.
OK, something else you should know: Even if your board doesn't support adjustable voltages, or a fixed voltage below the original 3.3v, you can run a Pentium MMX on it. Yes, 3.3v is more than the rated 2.8v. No, that won't hurt the CPU. I've sold hundred of overvoltage chip systems without a single return.
OK, Intel's Pentium MMX 233 uses a 3.5x multiplier, which is duplicate of the 1.5x setting, hence if you can set your CPU at 100MHz via 66x1.5, you can stick in a Pentium 233 MMX and have it run properly (sometimes BIOS reports the wrong speed, but that's not a problem, you can check it yourself in Windows using CPU-Z).
OK, so if your board requires an adapter, I'd skip that expense and use a 233MMX. You should really tell us which BOARD you have to begin with. Lacking that, we can figure it out for you using the BIOS ID that comes up when you start the system.
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