Difference between revisions of "CPU upgrade"
(→Upgrading your Pentium II to a Pentium III) |
(→Upgrading your Pentium II to a Pentium III: copy-edit) |
||
Line 1: | Line 1: | ||
== Upgrading your Pentium II to a Pentium III == | == Upgrading your Pentium II to a Pentium III == | ||
− | Thinkpads dating from around 1999-2000 have MMC2 CPU daughter boards, | + | Thinkpads dating from around 1999-2000 have MMC2 CPU daughter boards, and so can be upgraded. |
− | The [http://www-307.ibm.com/pc/support/site.wss/product.do?template=%2Fproductselection%2Flandingpages%2FbrowseByProductLandingPage.vm&sitestyle=lenovo&brandind=10&validate=true hardware maintenance manual] explains in details how to proceed. The | + | The [http://www-307.ibm.com/pc/support/site.wss/product.do?template=%2Fproductselection%2Flandingpages%2FbrowseByProductLandingPage.vm&sitestyle=lenovo&brandind=10&validate=true hardware maintenance manual] explains in details how to proceed. The catch is that the BIOS cannot activate the L2 cache of a Pentium III. This is solved by using a [http://www.maths.ox.ac.uk/~challet/module/module.html kernel module]. |
The good news is that the memory bus speed goes from 66MHz to 100MHz. | The good news is that the memory bus speed goes from 66MHz to 100MHz. | ||
− | The | + | The catch is that the BIOS produces errors of type 127 when booting (press ESC, then F1). This is solved by modifying one byte in the BIOS, using the integrated BIOS editor ([http://www.wimsbios.com/phpBB2/viewtopic.php?t=4046 this post]). |
− | Be | + | Be careful when choosing the speed of the new MMC2 daughter board, since there may be problems with voltages/speedstep. 500MHz is a safe choice. Processors with SpeedStep seem to work too but stay at their lowest speed unless one uses physically modifies the daughter board (see the post above). |
Revision as of 20:23, 23 March 2007
Upgrading your Pentium II to a Pentium III
Thinkpads dating from around 1999-2000 have MMC2 CPU daughter boards, and so can be upgraded.
The hardware maintenance manual explains in details how to proceed. The catch is that the BIOS cannot activate the L2 cache of a Pentium III. This is solved by using a kernel module.
The good news is that the memory bus speed goes from 66MHz to 100MHz.
The catch is that the BIOS produces errors of type 127 when booting (press ESC, then F1). This is solved by modifying one byte in the BIOS, using the integrated BIOS editor (this post).
Be careful when choosing the speed of the new MMC2 daughter board, since there may be problems with voltages/speedstep. 500MHz is a safe choice. Processors with SpeedStep seem to work too but stay at their lowest speed unless one uses physically modifies the daughter board (see the post above).