Sorry for the stupid question, but I am trying to fix a
friends computer. I need to replace the motherboard and cpu.
My friend currently has 512mb of PC100 SDRAM. I found a
motherboard/CPU combo on ebay thats inexpensive, BUT.. I'm
not sure it will work with her ram. The cpu in the combo I
found runs with a FSB of 133 (its a p3 933mhz). Will my
friends current 100mhz RAM work with the new 133mhz FSB cpu?
As far as I know, memory and FSB are operated at 1:1 only. That
is, if the board you are buying uses the 440BX Intel chipset.
http://homepage.hispeed.ch/rscheidegger/p2b_procupgrade_faq.html
http://homepage.hispeed.ch/rscheidegger/ram_bx_faq.html
One option would be to slow the processor down, from 933 to 700,
by using any DIP switches placed on the board for such mods.
You can then play with the clock and test whether the RAM is
still stable or not.
With the 440BX, there is an AGP divider that is set to either
1/1 or 2/3. At 133MHz, AGP runs out of spec at 89MHz. At
100Mhz, AGP runs in spec at 66MHz. At FSB 66MHz, the 1/1 setting
should be selected by the user, to get AGP running in spec at
66MHz. The 89MHz seems to be accomodated by most old video cards,
so this should not be a limitation.
As for PCI bus speed, there are a couple of possibilities.
Some clock generators have a 1/4 divider that operates at
133MHz, and that gives standard 33MHz PCI bus operation.
There are also some that only have 1/3 divider, leaving the
PCI bus at a non-stanaard and non-working 44MHz.
I'm guessing this motherboard was designed to run 133Mhz
processors, in which case if the 440BX chipset is used,
the AGP runs at 89MHz, and that should be OK. Dialing down
the clock that feeds the processor, should allow you to
run with the PC100 RAM. Make sure the motherboard has
adjustments, such as the DIP switches mentioned above.
Take a look at page 18 here, to see what an adjustable
motherboard looks like:
http://www.asus.com/pub/ASUS/mb/slot1/440bx/p3b-f/p3bf-104.pdf
For more precise info, posting the motherboard brand and model
number might be a good idea. It is possible, if some other
chipset is on your new motherboard, that other things are
possible. The 440BX just happens to be the "king of stability".
I have a board with 440BX and it still works.
HTH,
Paul