I know that less of a divider you use the better, but what are the limits that you can push the FSB and why is that so?
I remember back in the days of the Pentium MMX that I could overclock FSB on the TX chipset to 75 and even 83 Mhz and that would increase performance substantially (especially because L2 was run at that speed as well). Then when the Super Socket 7 platforms came out they had up to 100 mhz FSB. However I remember Tom and others not being able to get the Pentium MMX to work at 100 Mhz FSB even when run within the speed the chip was capable of. The K6's would work however, because they were designed to work at that FSB.
I always thought that you could use any FSB you wanted as long as the CPU could handle the speed it was set at. Why couldn't a PIII 800 be run at 100x8, 133x6 or 266x3 (assuming the chip is unlocked)? What is it that is stressed on the CPU when the FSB is cranked up? Does anybody know the FSB limitations of todays chips?
I remember back in the days of the Pentium MMX that I could overclock FSB on the TX chipset to 75 and even 83 Mhz and that would increase performance substantially (especially because L2 was run at that speed as well). Then when the Super Socket 7 platforms came out they had up to 100 mhz FSB. However I remember Tom and others not being able to get the Pentium MMX to work at 100 Mhz FSB even when run within the speed the chip was capable of. The K6's would work however, because they were designed to work at that FSB.
I always thought that you could use any FSB you wanted as long as the CPU could handle the speed it was set at. Why couldn't a PIII 800 be run at 100x8, 133x6 or 266x3 (assuming the chip is unlocked)? What is it that is stressed on the CPU when the FSB is cranked up? Does anybody know the FSB limitations of todays chips?