unsa Boards compatible sa p4 631 na procie? thanks... and also na pwede ma OC
p4 631 are HOT headed...samot nag mag OC ka.
anyways..that procie is compatible with intel G31 | G35 | P35E LGA775 based mobo
great brands are XFX | MSI | Abit
and since mag ilis ka ug board, ilisi na lang na ug any dualcore na intel
e2xxx | e4xxx | e5xxx | e6xxx | e7xxx | e8xxx
and a nice PSU
then OC
Last edited by butitoy; 07-05-2011 at 05:28 PM.
@butitoy sir kanang 631 D0 stepping 65 watt version init pud na? gusto man gud unta ko mupalit ani...
ask lang ko...tnx
basing from here http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of...ll_.2865_nm.29
P4 631 | S775 | 2M | 800FSB | 65nm | HT | Cedar Mill
The final revision of the Pentium 4 was Cedar Mill, released on January 5, 2006. This was simply a straightforward die shrink of the Prescott-based 600 series core to 65 nm, with no real feature additions. Cedar Mill had a lower heat output than Prescott, with a TDP of 86 W. The Core Stepping of D0 in late 2006 reduced this to 65 watts. It has a 65 nm core and features a 31-stage pipeline (just like Prescott), 800 MT/s FSB, Intel 64, Hyper-Threading and Virtualization Technology. As with Prescott 2M, Cedar Mill also has a 2 MB L2 cache. It was released as Pentium 6x1 and 6x3 (product code 80552) at frequencies from 3 GHz up to 3.6 GHz. Overclockers managed to exceed 8 GHz with these processors using liquid Nitrogen cooling.[19] Of the 6x1 range (631, 641, 651, and 661) only the latest revision D0 has Virtualization Technology support.
To distinguish Cedar Mill cores from Prescott cores with the same features, Intel added 1 to their model numbers. Thus, Pentium 4 631, 641, 651 and 661 are 65 nm microprocessors, while Pentium 630, 640, 650 and 660 respectively are their 90 nm equivalents.
Pentium 4 HT 630 - CPUs - Overclocking
temp : 67-7 -70 º C O'C speed bump ratio to TEmp ^^^^^^^^^^^One of the problems with the P4 was that it ran HOT. Very HOT. You need to watch your temps when OCing to make sure it doesn't start to throttle itself. If you don't want to buy a new cooler and just want to do some bench runs, take the side off your case and point a house fan at the CPU.
Things that can stop an OC include to much heat, to much/little voltage, incorrect ram settings or other bios settings. I suggest finding a guide about overclocking a P4 had following that.
http://www.hardwaresecrets.com/artic...perature/143/1
O'C status : Promising
Pentium 4 overclocked to 8GHz: let's see your fancy Core 2 try that -- Engadget
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