T
thanatoid
Guest
Hi Franc,
I DL'd the utils you mentioned, and decided to just go ahead and
flash the BIOS with the "990224sj" hacked version. I figured I
could always go back.
Well, it worked fine and I am now running an AMD K-6 475MHz CPU
set at 418 MHZ (or something) on a "300MHz max" board!!!
(It runs at 475 as well and MIGHT even run at 500 or 550 but I
don't want to overdo things. Better to "underclock" (?) than to
overclock in this situation, I think.)
It took about 50 reboots, fiddling with the RAM sticks, and
several intermittent "windows protection errors" but everything
seems OK now.
The hacked BIOS is INFINITELY more customizable than the
original one that came with the board, even though its "original
date" is 1995! But the latest changes were made in 2002. This is
the guy's homepage, BTW:
http://web.inter.nl.net/hcc/J.Steunebrink/
(I can't remember if it's mentioned on the "m571" site, I
believe I found it with Google.)
Before any of this, I ran SiSoftSandra and it gave me 2 errors
at first, one of which was eliminated after installing the K6
CPU. Apparently the original 166MMX could not cache all the
memory, or something like that.
I am still getting a Sandra message about memory being written
too fast (or something) but there was nothing in the new BIOS to
make the adjustment suggested. However, that setting DOES show
up using the AMIBCP.EXE which I DL'd from your site. So I may
try to /further/ edit the already hacked BIOS (it supposedly
even allows for HD's up to 137 GB, not that I am interested) to
change that setting.
/If/ that setting shows up once flashed - I don't understand why
it doesn't NOW, it's the SAME file - it might fix that problem,
even though it does not appear to have caused any trouble so
far.
I would not even know about if I hadn't installed Sandra - which
I have had for years, but never used. It's an excellent tool.
Too bad the trial version does not have the memory test enabled
(see next).
I ran MemTest-86 v3.4 from a floppy and on the first test it
gave me nothing but errors, and then it hanged (hung?) in the
2nd test (of about 8 or 9 tests total). The quick BIOS check of
the memory says "OK" and the machine works fine, so I don't
know. The 2 SDRAM's are a 128 and a 64, and they are both PC-100
- but of different manufacturers. (The K-6 475 /might/ be able
to handle PC133 SDRAM in which case I might be able to find one
256MB stick of those. I'll look into it later.)
In spite of these possibly existent memory troubles, there have
been no problems at all running the computer today - it did give
me a WPE when I first booted, but upon reboot it went into
Windows just fine.
Anyway, so far, so good, it seems.
Today I checked out the "forbidden NG" you mentioned but I
really had nothing specific to post about. I am just glad
everything didn't go up in flames and I want to relax a little
and see how things work over the next few days.
Thanks again for all your help - it is quite possible that I may
be able to eliminate the memory speed problem with the AMI BIOS
editor you provided (which I - needless to say - had no idea
even existed).
Regards
t.
--
[from a recent conversation]
thanatoid: So why did you decide you needed broadband?
Neighbor: I wanted to read my e-mail faster.
I DL'd the utils you mentioned, and decided to just go ahead and
flash the BIOS with the "990224sj" hacked version. I figured I
could always go back.
Well, it worked fine and I am now running an AMD K-6 475MHz CPU
set at 418 MHZ (or something) on a "300MHz max" board!!!
(It runs at 475 as well and MIGHT even run at 500 or 550 but I
don't want to overdo things. Better to "underclock" (?) than to
overclock in this situation, I think.)
It took about 50 reboots, fiddling with the RAM sticks, and
several intermittent "windows protection errors" but everything
seems OK now.
The hacked BIOS is INFINITELY more customizable than the
original one that came with the board, even though its "original
date" is 1995! But the latest changes were made in 2002. This is
the guy's homepage, BTW:
http://web.inter.nl.net/hcc/J.Steunebrink/
(I can't remember if it's mentioned on the "m571" site, I
believe I found it with Google.)
Before any of this, I ran SiSoftSandra and it gave me 2 errors
at first, one of which was eliminated after installing the K6
CPU. Apparently the original 166MMX could not cache all the
memory, or something like that.
I am still getting a Sandra message about memory being written
too fast (or something) but there was nothing in the new BIOS to
make the adjustment suggested. However, that setting DOES show
up using the AMIBCP.EXE which I DL'd from your site. So I may
try to /further/ edit the already hacked BIOS (it supposedly
even allows for HD's up to 137 GB, not that I am interested) to
change that setting.
/If/ that setting shows up once flashed - I don't understand why
it doesn't NOW, it's the SAME file - it might fix that problem,
even though it does not appear to have caused any trouble so
far.
I would not even know about if I hadn't installed Sandra - which
I have had for years, but never used. It's an excellent tool.
Too bad the trial version does not have the memory test enabled
(see next).
I ran MemTest-86 v3.4 from a floppy and on the first test it
gave me nothing but errors, and then it hanged (hung?) in the
2nd test (of about 8 or 9 tests total). The quick BIOS check of
the memory says "OK" and the machine works fine, so I don't
know. The 2 SDRAM's are a 128 and a 64, and they are both PC-100
- but of different manufacturers. (The K-6 475 /might/ be able
to handle PC133 SDRAM in which case I might be able to find one
256MB stick of those. I'll look into it later.)
In spite of these possibly existent memory troubles, there have
been no problems at all running the computer today - it did give
me a WPE when I first booted, but upon reboot it went into
Windows just fine.
Anyway, so far, so good, it seems.
Today I checked out the "forbidden NG" you mentioned but I
really had nothing specific to post about. I am just glad
everything didn't go up in flames and I want to relax a little
and see how things work over the next few days.
Thanks again for all your help - it is quite possible that I may
be able to eliminate the memory speed problem with the AMI BIOS
editor you provided (which I - needless to say - had no idea
even existed).
Regards
t.
--
[from a recent conversation]
thanatoid: So why did you decide you needed broadband?
Neighbor: I wanted to read my e-mail faster.