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eric@egypt.net schrieb:
> I have a celeron 566 that'll run all day at 133FSB and at normal
> voltage. that's 1.13ghz. (Actually it'll do 140FSB 1.189Ghz)
Not too shabby. Which stepping is it? (cD0, I bet - CPUID is 068A. I
once read about a cD0 1 GHz PIII which would run happily at its nominal
clock with just 1.35 V core.)
> So it's
> just like a PIII or a Tualatin Celeron except for the L2 cache. How
> much difference does there have to be in cpu Mhz to make a
> substitution (this chip for a PIII) worth it considering the
> difference in L2 cache? Does it depend on the application?
Let me list the differences first:
Coppermine Celeron: 128K L2 4-way associative (like Mendocino).
Coppermine PIII/Tualatin Celeron: 256K L2 8-way associative, faster.
Tualatin PIII: Same as above, but with hardware prefetch added.
PIII-S: Same as above, but with 512K L2 and prefetch.
In benchmarks, the 850 MHz CuMine Celeron was found to be about equal to
a 700 MHz CuMine PIII, so your 1.13 GHz variant would be about as fast
as a PIII-933. Of course, the exact relationship would depend on the
specific application. Something that strictly scales with core clocks
and needs little cache access, like MP3 encoding, would be just as fast
as on a 1.13 GHz PIII-S. In Q3A (which loves fast caches and high memory
bandwidth) it would apparently be about on par with an 800EB. If you'd
like a Celeron that's a whole lot faster when overclocked, try a
Tualatin 900A or 1.0A (many, if not most 1.0As will run happily at 1.33
GHz).
Stephan
--
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PC#6: i440BX, 1xP3-500E, 512 MiB, 18+80 GB, R9k AGP 64 MiB, 110W
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