There's something so comfy about the gui of that bios.
@krz88888883 жыл бұрын
Indeed, haven't seen this one in a while!
@VladoT3 жыл бұрын
There is also a mouse support if you plug one 🙂
@axizepp3 жыл бұрын
he is faking, its UEFI with a ryzen 3 gen cpu )))
@jonchapman68213 жыл бұрын
I’ve got this bios (or very very close) on a slot 1 system, and I absolutely hate it! 😆
@mlodzin903 жыл бұрын
It's called WinBIOS, and It's pretty comfortable for me :)
@stbagn3 жыл бұрын
Something inside me broke when I saw your PCI bus running at 60MHz... stable.
@kylejones83923 жыл бұрын
Same! Interesting though. I never thought about a chip being able to take a 60MHz PCI bus just because the same chip was used in an AGP application. Looks like I need to play with my PCI Voodoo Banshee.
@remasteredretropcgames33123 жыл бұрын
Something approaches. Gabe is watching.
@al73r3 жыл бұрын
I was more impressed by the heatsink
@hohiss833 жыл бұрын
@@al73r xD me too
@CommodoreGreg3 жыл бұрын
@@hohiss83 Our 486 didn't even have a heatsink. This era was really the beginning of heatsinks as the transistor count and frequency were rapidly climbing.
@gvii3 жыл бұрын
These are fun to watch for me mostly because back in the day when I ran this sort of hardware, I didn't dare do any overclocking for fear of burning something up. The hardware was just too expensive to risk blowing it up, at least for most of us at the time. So it is cool to see what you could do if you wanted to.
@kasimirdenhertog35163 жыл бұрын
I always figured it would be worth the gamble to impress my friends at school. Not long till I fried my first motherboard... ;-)
@eyejswije88602 жыл бұрын
I remember that moment in time when you either had a pentium 75, 90, 100, 120, 133, or 166
@jdmcs3 жыл бұрын
I always thought that version of the AMI BIOS was so cool back in the day. And I have to say that your sleepless nights were worth it, congrats on your successful overclock!
@CPUGalaxy3 жыл бұрын
Thank you!
@mrbrad46373 жыл бұрын
AMI always made the best looking/most interesting BIOSes... Especially back in the 286 to 486 era
@rennegaddefoxxe3 жыл бұрын
I remember AMI WinBIOS; I think it was on my Pentium 90.
@builder3963 жыл бұрын
Even my current BIOS doesnt have any windows. It does have mouse support going for it though.
@whoknows82252 жыл бұрын
to be honest, this was the time of the transition of going from msdos to windows as windows was getting more and more mainstream... i hated it. I was running dos as long as possible... i really loathed windows
@tl10243 жыл бұрын
What an awesome video! Thank you for OC'ing old hardware for this. At first, I thought "why on earth would he chose that video card?", but it becomes clear when the insane 60mhz pci bus speed was revealed as the "secret weapon".
@BrassicGamer3 жыл бұрын
It's only taken 25 years to realise the full potential of this platform lol. This was very entertaining and I'm definitely having a go myself, as I have an ADW revision. Maybe it's magic, like yours. Big props to the guys on the Vogons forum that originated this madness, particularly feipoa.
@remasteredretropcgames33123 жыл бұрын
Needs sub ambient.
@Zerbey3 жыл бұрын
I love how excited you got when you saw the Quake FPS value, I was right there with you. My own X5-133 would run at 160Mhz but it was unstable even with additional cooling. I never even attempted 180Mhz. I have a soft spot for the X5-133 platform because it's the first PC I financed and built myself (worked all Summer to afford it). Now I want to see if this can be pushed even further.
@CPUGalaxy3 жыл бұрын
... you will see it how I am going to push it to the limits 😊
@intrinia3 жыл бұрын
I seriously was never put on the edge of my seat for an overclocking video like this for felt ages. My eyes gone wider and wider as you went up the Mhz. Great stuff!
@Smartphonekanalen3 жыл бұрын
Congratulations! I loved doing 486 OC since it did big difference in reality. It was time saving during boot and it could be the difference in game between not playable and playable.
@CPUGalaxy3 жыл бұрын
thank you. Yes, exactly that is the point why 486s are fascinating.
@davidca963 жыл бұрын
One of the best overclocks I had back in the day was an AMD K62-233mhz that would do 500mhz on air cooling with stock voltage. Back then that was pretty impressive, I still have the cpu itself too.
@dallesamllhals91613 жыл бұрын
You sure it wasn't a K6-2+?
@intrinia3 жыл бұрын
OMG, I just love your channel! So much good stuff for my retro heart. :D
@AaronBockelie3 жыл бұрын
It's been 26 years since I worked on the project, but I remember building a synthetic clock board as comp sci undergraduate research assistant at the University of Washington. We used an (I think) 33mhz 486, and dynamically scaled the clock up and down in increments that matched with vesa local bus, ide, memory, and cpu edge timing. The board also had a small amount of buffer to capture/replay any bits on relevant bus interfaces that would get lost during a clock down event. We were able to scale the frequency high enough to completely loose communication with the video card and other peripherals, so implemented device watchdogs to record failures and put together a statistical map of how many faults and different frequencies things occurred. I recalled being able to greatly overclock the actual cpu, and the real issue was line delays in the motherboard itself - the traces were unable to carry the signals at higher frequency with enough precision. This is a neat project that you performed here, and congratulations on pushing the FPS on the quake benchmark. Superscape 3d vr benchmark is always fun to see too.
@janglur9 ай бұрын
This is why when I was running servers for MC I was obsessed with hardware optimization that looked nothing like the then big gaming overclockers. I was maximizing on RAM timings and pure latency. Invested in Optane drives to use as pure SSD due to their low latency and high I/O and higher write tolerance being much better than SSDs at the time for their price. When your limit was pure I/O, you start optimizing weird.
@ernestuz3 жыл бұрын
I used to have one of those back in the days, and I overclocked it to 166MHz, using a crappy FIC motherboard that I had for years. I had to do some work with a pin in the 486 to be able to use it, I isolated it with glue so it wasn't in contact with the socket. I could use it at that speed for most stuff, including a finite elements assignment, but there were a couple of games always crashing, so I reverted back to a more conservative 150MHz. I now think it was a matter of cooling, but who knows. Nice to see your channel is growing.
@supermoon48613 жыл бұрын
Great videos. I didn't realise Quake would run on a 486. I thought it was compiled with P5 instructions. I remember the first time I played the demo on an early Pentium. Also the first time I saw 'true' colour in Win 3.1 Good times.
@MonochromeWench3 жыл бұрын
It will even run on a 386 with a 80387 co processor installed.
@Dragonfire5113 жыл бұрын
I love watching your channel before sleeping, it relaxes me.
@bertholtappels10813 жыл бұрын
Very impressive. If I were to try to beat your world record, I’d keep everything identical, but replace the 14.318MHz Chrystal with a programmable oscillator from Silicon Labs. That way you could push everything to the physical limit and the board and software would be none the wiser.
@mrfrog85023 жыл бұрын
Would this not show the wrong values everywhere because you'd effectively change master clock reference used for time/speed counting?
@kylejones83923 жыл бұрын
That might not work. The ASIC itself likely runs at that clock speed and you might not get far before overclocking that value causes a problem.
@bertholtappels10813 жыл бұрын
@@kylejones8392 likely, but this is all an academic exercise anyway. If you can eke out another, say, percent, that may be worth it. Or not 🤷🏻
@bertholtappels10813 жыл бұрын
@@mrfrog8502 that depends on the clock distribution architecture, and the benchmarking software. I’d expect it to take time stamps from the RTC, not from the master clock. System clock timers have been an issue since the 8MHz 8088s broke 4.77MHz games, so I think it’s reasonable to assume benchmarks use a master clock-independent gating system. But I don’t know, I’m just assuming.
@kylejones83923 жыл бұрын
@@bertholtappels1081 Very true, every percent counts when you're smashing records!
@BadManiac3 жыл бұрын
My 5x86-133 on an ASUS PVI-486SP3 with an ARK 1000vl VLB graphics card and 32MB regular FPM at stock speed maxes out at 14.3 FPS in Quake and 1498 ticks in Doom, or 49.85 FPS. Looking at your stock result I feel pretty darn pleased with that! :) But to see a 486 get over 20FPS is absolutely remarkable. Amazing work, and thanks for sharing.
@LightTheUnicorn3 жыл бұрын
Awesome result, seriously impressive performance! Really loving your channel!
@bollux783 жыл бұрын
I had one of these and used it at 180mhz from 1997 to 2003. Played unreal on it with a 2MB VLB video card and 32MB of RAM. I used to call it the fastest 486 in the West.
@mixal313 жыл бұрын
Unreal on 5x86? How many fps?
@phreeze833 жыл бұрын
@@mixal31 probably like 12 or so ^^
@Radek__3 жыл бұрын
@@phreeze83 yeah 12 but per minute :-)
@DaniloSavioni3 жыл бұрын
incredible !! really enjoyed your video !! congratulations for the fastest 486 on earth !!!
@tiporari3 жыл бұрын
Nice job. When I was a kid I overclocked a 386SX33 to 66mhz by replacing the mobo clock crystal with a 66mhz crystal from an ISA modem. I had to add external cooling and a heatsink, but it was very fast but not super stable. Allowed me to run games that were not permitted to run on such a slow machine. Fast forward 25 or 30 years, and overclocked systems are routine.
@PROSTO4Tabal3 жыл бұрын
thank you for less "yeah". this video is interesting and educative, pleasure to watch. mid 90s is very interesting subject especially because of early 3D
@wutzerface773 жыл бұрын
aw what? I love all the "ja" please keep it
@ozmobozo3 жыл бұрын
Ja?
@wutzerface773 жыл бұрын
@@ozmobozo “Ja” is Yes/yeah auf Deutsch (in German)
@igotes3 жыл бұрын
Another "ja" fan checking in
@TheSkogemann3 жыл бұрын
Nice one! Got all nolstalgic from the days where you would do anything to squeeze out an extra megahertz. I noticed though, that you made an error at @22:13 saying "... multiplying by 34" but entered 35. I am not sure that means anything for your results, just worth mentioning!
@CPUGalaxy3 жыл бұрын
Thank you. I said by mistake 34 but entered the right value into the calculator.
@snap_oversteer3 жыл бұрын
180MHz 486? Damn, didn't even know the X5-133 can clock so high.
@rebeccaschade39873 жыл бұрын
You have to be quite lucky to manage that speed. But 160MHz should be doable with many more chips. Personally, I don't dare overclocking my retro stuff... I can't afford to risk damaging anything, but I'm certainly impressed by these numbers. Heck, that 486 is faster at Quake than my K5 100MHz, despite the K5 being a 5th gen chip.
@CPUGalaxy3 жыл бұрын
😉
@bitelaserkhalif3 жыл бұрын
That's silicon lottery for ya
@Zerbey3 жыл бұрын
@@rebeccaschade3987 X5-133 chips are extremely common, so don't worry about damaging a rare piece of hardware.
@rebeccaschade39873 жыл бұрын
@@Zerbey They still cost money, and I'm more worried about damaging the motherboard (voltage regulators etc.)
@spitefulwar3 жыл бұрын
Sir, you are now... the man - the legend!
@MOS65823 жыл бұрын
Another excellent vid. And thanks for recommending Atheatos channel. Looks 👍
@soulmata3 жыл бұрын
A house fire 7 years ago took an entire lifetime of vintage hardware from me, including my favorite rare CPU, an AMD K5 PR-200. Do you have any K5s you could toy around with? I've always wondered if they would function in a dual socket 7 motherboard.
@CPUGalaxy3 жыл бұрын
cool idea. i have enough k5 and also a nice dual s7 board 🤩
@bandiras23 жыл бұрын
@@CPUGalaxy Can't wait to see that! Thanks for your video!
@frogz3 жыл бұрын
@@CPUGalaxy not all heros wear capes!
@supermoon48613 жыл бұрын
I would be interested in seeing a dual Pentium Pro setup. I always wondered what the performance of those would be like. At the time the thought of NT with mutliple processors was very appealing.
@CPUGalaxy3 жыл бұрын
actually I have a sealed Dual Socket 8 board here. 😀
@christoffermedc3 жыл бұрын
Thanks for sharing his page! My favourite when larger KZbinrs recommend notable smaller KZbinrs, subscribed!!
@CPUGalaxy3 жыл бұрын
thank you. yeah, I know how hard it was for me as well when my channel was smaller. and the big ones are not reacting or answering. Even LGR ist not answering to my mails today... I am not after revenue on youtube, I do this because of passion and if i can help and promote smaller channels who are very professional as well, the whole community has a benefit out of that and we will get more interesting videos on youtube.
@christoffermedc3 жыл бұрын
@@CPUGalaxy Thank you for replying! Yeah, I fear they simply get overloaded, hard to sift through the relevant information etc with to many people trying to get your attention. I'm hoping to start my own channel sooner or later, and that's partly because I don't feel I can discuss the subjects presented in larger KZbinrs videos, due to being completely smothered by the other comments.
@lydialoud2 жыл бұрын
I must say that I love your videos and I wish you would post more often. I send you all the love I can from the United States
@stevec00ps3 жыл бұрын
I'm amazed the PCI embedded IDE/SuperIO controller works at 60Mhz too!
@CPUGalaxy3 жыл бұрын
yeah, I was amazed as well. 😊
@tsftm41923 жыл бұрын
I can't believe that C&T mae such a 486 motherboard, its insane, considering there were other companies making extreme boards at the time. Having cache modules on a 486 was extremely rare, I only saw them on later PII and DEC Alpha machines. Your board is similar to my SOYO 486 with all types of connections but you may be able to have 1MB of cache by combining bothe the module and the empty surface mount if you can find and solder the chips. Not a fan of AMI or Phoenix BIOS though, I'm an Award fan. All things considered, you have one of the best 486 platforms to work on. Good job. I have overclocked my 486 machines back in the day, but considering how old they are now, I don't want to stress the electronics, so they run at vanilla specs. You are very lucky to find that motherboard with the cache module. I couldn't find one after months of searching for a RISC motherboard that I had so I gave up.
@glittlehoss3 жыл бұрын
Your best material yet. Keep it up.
@ted-b3 жыл бұрын
That was fun! Congratulations on your world record.
@dustinweatherby55183 жыл бұрын
This is such a cool channel I'm so glad I happened to find it!
@nexxusty2 жыл бұрын
You just taught me about CPU wafer binning. Appreciate that.
@spladam38453 жыл бұрын
This was fantastic, well done. Can't wait to see if this can be beat, not by much I guess, because that is a bad ass 486 you have put together here!
@DanPellegrino4863 жыл бұрын
Your channel is going to be huge.
@iDork563 жыл бұрын
No way! I didn't realize what I had. I was watching the video and thought this looked familiar. I got an X5-133ADW from a failed estate sale, with an "X" marked on it. It's definitely a cool conversation piece on how different CPUs are today.
@andheeid3 жыл бұрын
7:18 i love that amibios already support mouse input... i used umc based chipset too for my 486 back in the day
@w00tDr3 жыл бұрын
Congratulations, and well done.
@kokodin58953 жыл бұрын
man this is my "the first computer" cpu, and motherboard if not the same it is very very similar. you have much better graphics though the bios is the same i am already crying from nostalgia that sound counting memory and you even have 16 megs of ram also i love it
@OzzFan10003 жыл бұрын
Amazing. Congratulations!
@vapourmile3 жыл бұрын
Great content from this channel as always. For PC enthusiasts, CPUG is without peer on KZbin. Hopefully this will start a 486 war and we'll finally see just how much could have been squeezed from that CPU. I'd be happy to see the same for earlier Intel chips. Often the PC chassis they were put in didn't do them justice.
@VincentFischer3 жыл бұрын
Wow the bios gui looks nicer then from my PCs today.
@JVAmorim3 жыл бұрын
Amazing video! Continue sending us more content like this. A fan from Brazil
@CPUGalaxy3 жыл бұрын
Thank you! Soon it is getting to the limit with the AMD X5 to 200 MHz. 😉. Thanks vor visiting my channel.
@Xaltar_3 жыл бұрын
Awesome video! Worth noting for anyone taking up the challenge, even if you were to achieve say 200mhz (50mhz x4) you likely still wouldn't beat the Quake score because you would be limited to 25mhz on the PCI bus or 50mhz if you have a board like this that can be tricked into bypassing the divider or a PCI enabled board that lacks the divider entirely. Ideally you would want to run at a 66mhz FSB setting, this will net you higher PCI speeds. You will need a PCI Graphics card that uses the same GPU as an AGP card (like the one used here). This will guarantee you are able to run at the full 66mhz as supported by AGP. Other tips would be larger, faster lvl2 cache. I think the key here is overclocking the floating point unit as far as possible in conjunction with a 66mhz PCI bus. I don't know if CPU Galaxy tried this but I would be very curious what the result would be with 66mhz FSB with a multi of 2.5, would the extra 6mhz on the PCI bus make up for the lower overclock, 166mhz vs 180mhz. How much of the uplift is coming from the faster PCI bus and how much is caused by the faster clocked FPU? The ideal would be to run at 66mhz x 3 but finding a CPU stable at 200mhz will be difficult, if not impossible. Videos like these make me sad that I no longer have my collection of 486 and early Pentium/AMD K6 CPUs/boards. Sadly I moved country and could not bring them with me. Now they cost more than they are worth to replace.
@CPUGalaxy3 жыл бұрын
3x66 MHZ and also 66 mhz on the pci bus is already in work 🙃. But with another board and I need some active cooling the cpu to 0 degrees... soon, here on my channel. 😉
@Xaltar_3 жыл бұрын
@@CPUGalaxy Excellent, looking forward to the results :)
@Kedvespatikus3 жыл бұрын
A legend is born. The real masterpiece here is the overclocking of the PCI bus. Yes, the Game Blaster could take that 60 MHz, but most likely there were other devices on that bus (IDE controller etc.). Insane and ingenous! Now, do you see any chance for that magical 200 MHz? :) :)
@CPUGalaxy3 жыл бұрын
Thank you! Yes, I am still testing but the results are already very good for a 200 MHz setup. It will be a quiet interesting video as well. Another mainboard, 66.6 MHz Busspeed and multiplier of 3. I am going to beat my own records again. But I need to bring the cpu to 0 degrees to be stable. 😉
@snooopy3653 жыл бұрын
@@CPUGalaxy I'm quite angry with myself... I didn't keep my 5x86... it was posting and running with 200Mhz without special cooling.... but the Matrox Graphicscard didn't like it, so I just ran it at I believe 150Mhz.
@carlwillows3 жыл бұрын
That's a fast 486! Little late in the cycle though. Wasn't long after that came out that I had me a Pentium II rig! (w/agp!!!)
@arthurmann5783 жыл бұрын
Wow! I remember playing the original Half Life using an AMD 486 (5x86?)120 Megahertz, slightly over clocked. I can't remember the speed I managed to get it up to as it was so long ago. I also was using a rather crappy PCI graphics card at the time and I actually enjoyed the experience! My friends could not believe I could actually do this until they saw for themselves. I wish that I had your setup at the time as I can only imagine how much faster it might have been! I think that I may still have that old motherboard and processor around somewhere, minus the HUGE tower case that I had it installed in. I miss those days..... Great video by the way! Subscribed! 👍👍
@0katmandude03 жыл бұрын
brings back memories! we overclocked the living daylights out of a similar CPU back in the days. We scavenged a radiator from an amplifier and modded it to fit the motherboard then mounted two cone shaped extension brackets to funnel air from a big industrial 5V 160mm fan to 120 , then to 80mm to fit on the radiator. that fan was way way too powerful for the fan header, so I rigged the one of the rails to supply the wattage and the amps to the fan. you know you've made a big mistake when the air coming off it can tear stuff of the MB. but hey it worked and we had something in the region of 25 to 30% overclock on the cpu.
@albase11123 жыл бұрын
Geez…This is freaking AMAZING 😳 I mean reaching about ten times the normal CPU clock speed alone is sub-zero but the fact that the north bridge as well as the RAM modules is still willing to work at 60MHz is something I had never expected would be feasible 😶 Outstanding work! 😍
@CPUGalaxy3 жыл бұрын
Thank you. But check out then my 200 Mhz video. ☺️ kzbin.info/www/bejne/gnqUkIWii7Gbq5o
@albase11123 жыл бұрын
@@CPUGalaxy you‘re kidding me 😳
@CPUGalaxy3 жыл бұрын
😇😉
@lustechsource51973 жыл бұрын
Enjoyed the video. I had an AMD 133Mhz CPU that I overclocked to 166MHz. No FPU though. I didnt add any extra cooling to it and it died several months later. That did give me an excuse to get a new CPU with an FPU so I could finally play quake without going to my Universities computer labs.
@pvc9883 жыл бұрын
1. Try sticking a bit of red or orange electric tape over that 7 segment display to make it more readable for the camera. 2. I think it should be possible to modify the BIOS to override that 2x PCI clock divider. Or even better, write simple tool to change the setting on the fly from DOS (as long as there is any decent documentation available for the chipset).
@DanielLopez-up6os3 жыл бұрын
This overclocking video was super exciting and enjoyable.
@Stefan_Payne3 жыл бұрын
Nice, higher gains than the increas in clockspeed. Interesting what difference "Plattform Performance" can make.
@gfunkster3 жыл бұрын
Great work and congratulations
@CptJistuce3 жыл бұрын
I have that exact motherboard, only the two unpopulated pads in the corner have Fake Cache(TM) on them. It truly is glorious how the traces wrap around from one side of the fake cache area and reconnect back on the other side.
@sonyericssoner3 жыл бұрын
Great video. Sad than my similiar woodgrain 486 stoped working. I would totaly atempt to beat you
@jamespilcher52873 жыл бұрын
The intro sting alone was enough for me to subscribe
@GadgetUK1643 жыл бұрын
Awesome =D Goes without saying the graphics card may be happy at 66Mhz, but the southbridge may evetually die if overlocked too long.
@vulturius76643 жыл бұрын
Well done! I really liked watching this moment in history ;-)
@DevilishDesign3 жыл бұрын
Ahh the good old M919. The traces for the two (Unpopulated) cache chips are rather 'interesting' on this board! I had one back in the 90's which had the fake cache chips soldered on :)
@SireSquish3 жыл бұрын
I'd like to hear more about this. What was with those unpopulated spaces anyway?
@DevilishDesign3 жыл бұрын
@@SireSquish The space was for cache RAM to be soldered to the board. In the case of some revisions of this board, the circuit traces only link the two cache chips together and do not connect to the rest of the board! Pretty useless. For a shot period in the mid 90's cache RAM was very expensive so companies cheated and used fake chips. More detail can be found here... redhill.net.au/b/b-bad.html The board used in this video has a real cache module installed in the slot in front of the PCI connectors.
@SireSquish3 жыл бұрын
@@DevilishDesign That's a combination of surprising, not surprising, hilarious and infuriating. So many things were dodges like that before widespread Internet knowledge.
@rasz3 жыл бұрын
@@DevilishDesign not "companies", _one company_, PcChips
@DevilishDesign3 жыл бұрын
@@rasz They were certainly the worst offender but boards from Gigabyte and QDI also had fake cache
@HighTreason6103 жыл бұрын
Very impressive. I dabbled with this a long time ago, but could never get the VGA card to work - knew the CPU was working, because removing the card resulted in angry beeps. Perhaps it's worth another go, just for fun, though I doubt any of the cards I have that might run at this speed would be very fast in DOS. I still feel the WinChip is overlooked here. It's kinda '486-Like' but runs in boards with AGP and SDRAM, as well as being clocked at over 200MHz right out of the box. It just isn't the same, though.
@jrherita3 жыл бұрын
43rd week of 1996 is quite impressively late for the 486 / 5x86 chipset. The P6 Pentium Pro was already available commercially for a year that point, and Pentium MMX was also literally launched just that week (~October 22, 1986). The AM5x86-133 (@160 MHz w/VL Bus cards) got me through a rather "poor" period time of my life after a bunch of stuff happened - a lot of value for the $, and I used it from 1995-1997 as my main PC and for another 3 years as a network node to help me get my MCP and MCSE for WindowsNT certifications. The final hurrah for the system came in 2000 when I decided to see if it would run under mineral oil for cooling (and yes of course it worked great). Unfortunately with no way to clean the board, the board and processor went in the trash :/. I do have a "Powerleap 5x86-133" sitting in a box though today. P.S. Wow! I remember that BIOS!
@Choralone4223 жыл бұрын
Pretty neat. That board is definitely a unicorn among 486 boards! I also had one of those AMD chips in my 486 board back in the mid 90's. I ended up having to run mine at 3x40 for a 120 mhz total speed. My board would not recognize anything higher than a 3x multiplier no matter what settings I tried so I ran it at the max bus speed of 40 mhz. By the same time that board was released you could buy a non-MMX Pentium up to 200 mhz which would blow that 486 chip out of the water in Quake. But it's still neat to see it clocked that fast!
@nikmilosevic16963 жыл бұрын
AWESOME. Still have one of these boards with a 5x86 chip and the fastest RAM I could find in the day (50ns). Used to scare the pentium 90 users with it clocked to 50MHz bus @ 150MHz CPU. I remember having trouble getting cards that would work with bus setting at 50MHz. Used to run it at 160MHz on a 40MHz bus also. But 180MHz, thats fantastic.
@ApostolCV3 жыл бұрын
I great you with the record ! Nice job is done!
@BM-jy6cb3 жыл бұрын
The PR133 is super rare? Dammit! Mine went to landfill many years ago. I think it was the only drop-in replacement processor that impressed me. I noticed a significant performance boost after replacing my 486dx2100 and as you mentioned, you got Pentium performance for the price of a 486
@Natomon013 жыл бұрын
This is dangerous for me. I have almost the exact same setup you're playing with in this video! I actually have heard of the strategy you're employing here, but nobody who explained it on Vogons went into this level of detail.
@docpaul3 жыл бұрын
Awesome video - thanks for all the effort you put into this - I was doing this 20 years ago!
@briangleeson15283 жыл бұрын
Cool video! This is the CPU I used on my very first PC build.
@mikegaming49243 жыл бұрын
It is interesting to see a channel where old components are overclocked and benchmarked. I will look if you have Voodoo3 overclocks here.
@GabrielZ6663 жыл бұрын
Wow, absolutely amazing! I have the same setup and a couple of AMD X5s but I don't even dare to try! What about using another graphics card? I remember testing a GF2 MX400 just for fun on an M915 with a DX4-100 and noticed a huge improvement in Doom, although I didn't test Quake. Can't wait to see the 200mhz video!!!!
@dialupdavid3 жыл бұрын
Used to do this sort of thing back in the day, if you're really looking to get 100% you'll definitely want to hijack the PLL output and replace it with some kind of dynamically adjustable oscillator.. I've seen people do this with FPGA's and other more hardware based approaches using some timing circuits. But, you should be able to get much finer clock adjustment than the standard configurations of the multiplier or PLL chip allow. Your chip may not be stable at 200Mhz, but could potentially hit 190Mhz with a custom PLL clock.
@wayneholzer46943 жыл бұрын
This channel deserves way more subs than LTT honestly
@VladoT3 жыл бұрын
GREAT work!!!
@derek85643 жыл бұрын
I had one back in the day. This thing rocked !
@ltlk9373 жыл бұрын
Still loving your new intro!!
@ms-dosman77223 жыл бұрын
Really well done! Hope you can get a 3x66 mhz FSB working for the next attempt!
@IanSlothieRolfe3 жыл бұрын
So, how many X5-133's do have to test to find one that will clock this fast? You must have a pretty huge drawerfull!
@mlodzin903 жыл бұрын
Wonderful! I didn't even know that this chip can go to 180MHz. I always thought that 160MHz is It's max :)
@Alexander_Gurov_RF Жыл бұрын
This generation of AMD CPUs was very good for overclocking. And also K6, and K6-2 too. I have used an overclocked K6 long time ago.
@AndreCotrim6163 жыл бұрын
About overclocking the PCI bus, I once had an experience tweaking jumper settings on a 500 MHz K6-2. I set the FSB to 112 MHz instead of 100 MHz, with a multiplier of 4.5 instead of 5, giving me 504 MHz on the CPU (only 1% overclock, the chip I had wouldn't give me more) but with a PCI bus clock of 37.5 MHz instead of 33 MHz (there was a divider by 3 on the motherboard to get the 33 MHz PCI bus clock from the 100 MHz FSB clock), which would give me some extra performance even though the CPU was running near stock clock. I had to revert to 100 x 5 because the HDD died and the replacement drive didn't like the overclocked PCI bus. So I immediately paused the video and thought "60 MHz on the PCI bus, that's so crazy!"
@proffieosultra30483 жыл бұрын
i did this exactly and ran it for a long time 5x86 133mhz, running at 180mhz 64Mb RAM it was solid and played MK3 very well!
@proffieosultra30483 жыл бұрын
ASUS P5A was annoying but ran this chip very well at 180mhz
@wishusknight30093 жыл бұрын
@@proffieosultra3048 *sp3 ?
@RC-nq7mg3 жыл бұрын
I once ran a sempron 2500+ 1750Mhz 1.6volt cpu at 2150Mhz stable on air with a load temp of 55 celsius at 2.2volts. Ran it for years like that. Used a 90CFM bathroom fan as a blower over a solid copper heatsink to keep it cool. it was loud.
@brucetungsten57143 жыл бұрын
Great video! I could only source one am5x86 capable of 180 mhz so far - boots up with 200 but it's unfortunately a no go. The i486Dx4 goes up to 133 max. - and that's pushing it.
@karolwojtyla30473 жыл бұрын
Congratulation! ;)
@TomStorey963 жыл бұрын
I've recently been playing around with a Motorola 68360, rated at 33MHz but it seemed to run quite comfortably at 50MHz. That's where I stopped, so maybe it will go further, bit it was getting noticeably warmer so I decided not to push it any more. I wonder then if this one came from the middle of a wafer!
@KasparOnTube3 жыл бұрын
I really liked that cooling solution :D
@thomassmith49993 жыл бұрын
The fastest setups of these old days machines have be lost to time 20 years ago. Almost no one remembers even the slot one records or mobile barton records anymore. It's a real shame but at least we can try again now.
@1NIGHTMAREGAMER3 жыл бұрын
im rlly curios how fast the 486 architecture could go on 7nm
@EternalxFrost3 жыл бұрын
I remember those AMI GUI BIOSes. I had an AOpen socket 7 motherboard from 1997 with that BIOS. It was supporting MMX and S Pentiums from 75 up to 200 MHz. I loved it. It even supported mouse, which was pretty innovative for that time. The ancestor of today's UEFI BIOS.
@rennegaddefoxxe3 жыл бұрын
I remember AMI WinBIOS! Had it on my Pentium 90 MHz, I think it was. First time I saw a mouse cursor in BIOS setup. Mind-blowing.
@fsfs5553 жыл бұрын
Ah, the Chips M919, a board famous for questionable build quality and fake L2 cache, though this later board is a little higher quality and didn't bother to install the fake cache chips (though the pads and pointless traces are still visible at the bottom left at the beginning of the video). Red Hill Computer has a pretty good write-up about this (and many other vintage PC bits). PCI standard originally allowed for 16-37.5MHz operation to support the variety of CPU bus speeds common in the early '90s, with a 66MHz option introduced in the late '90s. AGP is essentially PCI signaling at higher speed and with a dedicated channel directly to RAM (as the AGP aperture) for additional texture storage, which is why there were so many video cards using the same chip for both PCI and AGP (later AGP/PCIe cards have to use bridge chips because the signals are too different).
@vdfritzz3 жыл бұрын
wow, this brings me back, the pc of the house used to be a pentium 100, the motherboard was similar to this
@Edman_793 жыл бұрын
Very nice! And you have a new subscriber :D
@CPUGalaxy3 жыл бұрын
Thank you!
@mal2ksc3 жыл бұрын
I seem to recall that practically every later (like after the first year of production) AMD 486DX4/100 ran just fine at 120 MHz, and lots of people did this and found out (as you mentioned) that some PCI video cards were not happy. Most Socket 3 boards that topped out at 40 didn't have a frequency divider for the PCI bus.
@Phunker13 жыл бұрын
I had a 233mmx that ran all the way up to 300. Good times :)
@Crazy80ivan3 жыл бұрын
And now it is time to grab a voodoo 3 PCI version. The voodoo 3 works well on slow computers and is also capable running at that pci bus speed. You will have to cool the voltage regulator on de voodoo 3 card, because it gets hotter at higher pci bus speeds. Then run quake 1 and 2 and other 3d games. And also try to use a soundcard, it will change the quake and doom score. Would be nice to see how much it changes the outcome. Use a Creative AWE64. It uses the least ammount of cpu time. I have tested serveral cards and that one came out best. Back in the day I played on my 160Mhz amdX5 the following games. Monstertruck madness, Quake 1 and 2, nfs 2 SE, motorscross madness and Descent. I used a Voodoo 1 from Trust in combination with drivers from Diamond. My graphics card was a (i think it was a Trident tgui 9440) graphics card with 1MB of ram.
@Arti9m3 жыл бұрын
Very nice, congrats! I own the same CPU, but I won't even consider overclocking it because I have only one =). I'm currently playing around with Pentium 3 FSB overclocking. I want to have 800MHz P3 (used to have this model when I was a kid), but I managed to find only 733 and 866 for cheap. Solution for me is to overclock 733 to 800 by overclocking FSB from 133 to 145 MHz. That gives 36.25 MHz for PCI and 72.5 for AGP. I still have to test this system for stability. My only concerns are ATA drives and a network controller, those are known to not work properly on an overclocked bus.
@p_mouse86763 жыл бұрын
Pentium 3 and Celerons were insane for overclocking. I used to have a 667Mhz which would run at 1050Mhz, no problem all day everyday. At that time my motherboard was not the best, so I think I could have even squeezed out a little more!! Back in the day some people said overclocking was just silly, would barely improve the performance. Well, this overclock meant I could run Quake 3 all of a sudden!