Author |
Message |
ryan

Joined: 19 Apr 2006
Posts: 261
Location: WisConSin
|
Posted:
Thu Feb 10, 2011 10:24 pm |
  |
I vaguely remember this in an old Computer Shopper magazine I used to buy right next to the Socket 4 to Socket 5 adapter.
It basically said you could upgrade your 486 to a pentium 75mhz or 100mhz chip for less than a POD83 using a Socket 3 to Socket 5 adapter.
It was right next to the Upgrade your pentium 60/66 to socket 5 Pentium chips 90/100/120mhz.
It was a socket adapter with a voltage regulator.
Does anyone remember these?
I am curious what brands there were because this could potentially allow for a very unusual 486 k62-300mhz system with a pair of socket adapters
I also could test and see if a real pentium had fewer bugs than the POD.
Cheers
Ryan |
|
|
   |
 |
T-R-A

Joined: 02 Oct 2004
Posts: 594
Location: Western NC
|
Posted:
Fri Feb 11, 2011 11:18 am |
  |
I tinkered with POD's for a while and vaguely remember either Evergreen (Evertech?) or somebody else having something like that. I did get an Evergreen upgrade (K5-133) working in an PS/2 Valuepoint (think it needs a battery) but didn't notice a large degree of improvement over the 486DX-66 that was originally in it... |
|
|
  |
 |
harshbarj
Joined: 01 Oct 2004
Posts: 169
Location: behind you!
|
Posted:
Fri Feb 11, 2011 10:59 pm |
  |
I had a socket 5 to socket 7 adapter, but that is all I have ever seen. Honestly I don't think a socket 3 to 5 adapter would work. There were too many changes architecturally IMHO.
Now the overdrive chips did offer a boost over the standard 486, unlike what T-R-A experienced. I had a Compaq portable 486c that had a 486-66 and I installed a pny (evergreen) 133 chip. The original system could not play mp3 files without major problems, but the same system with the upgrade chip could play any mp3 I gave it and even allowed me light usage of the computer during playback. |
_________________ Raise Your IQ. Eat Gifted Children. |
|
    |
 |
T-R-A

Joined: 02 Oct 2004
Posts: 594
Location: Western NC
|
Posted:
Sat Feb 12, 2011 10:28 am |
  |
Well, not all my tinkering was in vain. The POD83 in an AST machine was noticeably faster than its' original 486DX-66. It ran Win95(A) for many years until it succumbed to a power supply problem. Rescued the HDD and transfered it to a Compaq Deskpro 2000 (P133) with everything intact (obviously had to tinker with drivers and such). |
|
|
  |
 |
harshbarj
Joined: 01 Oct 2004
Posts: 169
Location: behind you!
|
Posted:
Sat Feb 12, 2011 4:39 pm |
  |
T-R-A wrote: |
Well, not all my tinkering was in vain. The POD83 in an AST machine was noticeably faster than its' original 486DX-66. It ran Win95(A) for many years until it succumbed to a power supply problem. Rescued the HDD and transfered it to a Compaq Deskpro 2000 (P133) with everything intact (obviously had to tinker with drivers and such). |
Would that had been a AST Advantage Adventure 6066d? That's one of the ast systems I have and run with a POD chip. |
_________________ Raise Your IQ. Eat Gifted Children. |
|
    |
 |
T-R-A

Joined: 02 Oct 2004
Posts: 594
Location: Western NC
|
Posted:
Sat Feb 12, 2011 8:03 pm |
  |
Quote: |
Would that had been a AST Advantage Adventure 6066d? That's one of the ast systems I have and run with a POD chip. |
Yep, I believe it was. For a long time it was the 2nd fastest machine I had behind an IBM PC350 (which had been upgraded from 100MHz to 166MHz and 144MB of RAM). Many years on dial-up for both machines, and they didn't fail me (until the AST took the formerly-mentioned P/S dirt nap). The PC350 still worked last time I checked (2 years ago).  |
|
|
  |
 |
ryan

Joined: 19 Apr 2006
Posts: 261
Location: WisConSin
|
Posted:
Sat Feb 12, 2011 11:23 pm |
  |
the p24t was almost identical to the original P60 internally, in fact there were complaints that its same math bugs as the P60.
I do definately know of a Socket 4 to socket 7 adapter my friend had one in his old first gen IBM P60.
Socket 3->5 seems existed for a short time, I remember a socket adapter for that purpose around late 1994/early 95, perhaps it was deceptive advertising of some sort.
My guess is it was probably expensive and buggy, no way of knowing unless I find a brand/type. |
|
|
   |
 |
Anonymous Coward

Joined: 20 Nov 2004
Posts: 589
Location: Shandong, China
|
Posted:
Mon Jul 04, 2011 3:02 am |
  |
I've personally seen the Socket 4 --->Socket 7 adapters. They are very rare though. You could actually upgrade a P60 to a K6-2 400MHz as it supported low voltages and split rail MMX chips.
I have never seen or heard of a socket3 -->Socket 5 adapter before, but it was always my dream to have such a thing. I could believe that something that that would be possible, it just wasn't worth it for companies to manufacture. If you could find mention of this in a magazine I'd love to see it. Something like that belongs in a museum. |
|
|
   |
 |
wdegroot
Joined: 03 Feb 2006
Posts: 488
Location: pennsylvanai
|
Posted:
Sat Jul 23, 2011 7:34 pm |
  |
after the original rush to be faster
some companies sold Upgrade adapters for just about any 496 586
and slockets for slot 1 cpus.
the problem thay were trying to overcome was 1- the old mb did not support the lower voltage of the faster chip
2- the new chip ,. often a mmx a amd 233 or a k5-1
requred a split voltage/.
mpoy that a p1 180 sold for much more than a p1-180 mmx
because the MMX chip required a split voltage bus that the older mb could not provide
an exception was the winchip a lower power cpu that would run on a MB designes for p1- 66-180 non mm\z mb.
the popular o\nes were the 180 and the 233.
it shortly became apparent that a new mb ( used or even new)
cost less than the upgrade CHIP/Adapter
On the 496 side cirix made a dx`2-80 that woulkd directly replace the intel dx2-66 m jusat rejumper the bus from 33 to 40.
the dx4-=actuaslly it was a dx3 often required more sumpers and even a bios upgrade
about this time AMD made a 120 chip 33 x4 and a 133 chip.
many boards that were intel dx4-100 capable would see the amd 120 or 133 as a 120, some could even run at 133.
the popular pc-chips mb were flakey and died after a few years
again on the pentium 233 side
the amd was not a safe replacement for other INtel mmx chips as it was a powere hog and could burn out the mb.
the later super socket 7 mb using the amd k6-2 and k6-3 chips
were the peak or that technology
Most mb that accepted at least a intel p233mmx
would work with the amd k6-2 but it required a lower violtage setting
the third party UPGRADE chips were an oppotunistic scam
from 3 or 4 companies.
remeber this was wfwg ( 4.11 days) and chipsets did not support a lot of memory or large drives
My pc chips m520m accepted 128 m of ram and was not a split voltage mb. it barely took a ten gb drive ( only on auto detect)
I think wfwg running over dod 6.22 would only see 64 m of ram.
hey you can have if for postage! |
|
|
   |
 |
|