A didn't even thank about the temp of the AGP set. Thanks.
--
John Wilger
Lead Web Consultant
The Broken Seal Web Design Company
(513) 253-7017
5322 Eastknoll Ct.
Suite 14
Cincinnati, OH 45239
On Wed, 15 Dec 1999, Christian E wrote:
> John Wilger wrote:
> >
> > No, neither CPU ever went above 65C. I have fans on both of them, and 2 in
> > the case. I know the temp gauge is working because when I first built the
> > system I didn't have fans on the CPUs. Even at 366 the temperature
> > sky-rocketed, so I shut it down and bought the fans promptly. I have
> > over-clocked a single celeron 366 to 500 in the same manner on a different
> > computer with absolute reliability, so I'm almost certain it has to do
> > with the timing between chips. I'm not technical enough to know if there's
> > a solution, though. If not, I'll live. It's still faster than my old
> > system.
>
> It is not a timing issue. It is definately due to overheating. I have
> bought oversized coolers for my CPU's and have removed the AGPset
> heatsink and mounted the old CPU heatsink and cooler on it instead. All
> in all a bit noisy but is rock solid. I run two 333's at 480. They can
> go above 500 and still be stable, but I like to have some margin ( if
> you go to a computer-party for example...man it can get hot with
> hundreds of computers in one room !!)...I can play Q3,Q2, Unreal
> Tournament, compile kernels... you name it...Never a single crash !! But
> it only became stable enough when the AGPset was cooled...
>
> best regards
>
> Christian
>
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