IWETHEY v. 0.3.0 | TODO
1,095 registered users | 1 active user | 0 LpH | Statistics
Login | Create New User
IWETHEY Banner

Welcome to IWETHEY!

New Why risky?
When you say a memory problem, do you mean that my memory has probably gone bad, or that it's just not fast enough for the processor?

So I guess to fix my problem what I need to do is go out and buy a new motherboard with a 266 bus and some of that new-fangled DDR Ram...

Not that I'd mind, I'm just a bit short on cash right now.
"We are all born originals -- why is it so many of us die copies?"
- Edward Young
New While I'm on the subject...
if I'm going out to buy this new motherboard and ram, should I get a bigger power supply? Maybe go on up to 500? I don't know what the minimum is supposed to be anymore...

"We are all born originals -- why is it so many of us die copies?"
- Edward Young
New I don't think your parts are "bad" - they just interact as
if they are. The RAM (what brand and specs, BTW?) may be fine on another machine. In [link|http://www.anandtech.com/showdoc.html?i=1303&p=3|Anandtech's review of this board] they recommend Corsair or Muskin memory. Newegg.com has a 512 MB stick of PC133 Corsair CL-2.5 memory for $67. I've been happy with my Soyo K7V Dragon+ using Crucial memory. Newegg's cheapest Soyo board is $78. 512 MB of Crucial DDR for it would be $128.

If you don't have money to burn, *don't* buy anything. Just use what you've got but tweak it until it's reliable (even if you have to run it slightly slowly). Things will always be faster and cheaper in the future. :-)

You shouldn't need more than 300 W for your system. 500 W is overkill unless you've got lots of PCI cards (e.g. SCSI cards) and lots of hard drives.

According to [link|http://www.amd.com/us-en/assets/content_type/white_papers_and_tech_docs/24309.pdf|this], your 2000+ dissipates a maximum power of 70 W (maximum chip temperature of 90 C). It draws a maximum of 40 A at 1.75 V (35.7 A typical). [link|http://www.amd.com/us-en/assets/content_type/white_papers_and_tech_docs/26003.pdf|This] AMD paper gives you pointers on how to calculate how big a PS you need. 300 W should be plenty if it's an ATX12V supply.

HTH.

Cheers,
Scott.
(Who thinks his 1.2 GHz Athlon home system is plenty fast enough right now...)
     Various questions about my CPU and BIOS - (cwbrenn) - (14)
         The CPU speed is a multiple of your memory bus speed. - (Another Scott) - (8)
             I used to have some problems like this. - (Andrew Grygus) - (4)
                 Succient and to the point... - (folkert)
                 I'm looking into GigaByte myself. - (n3jja) - (2)
                     I have used a few GigaByte without problems - (Andrew Grygus)
                     I have one of those - (JayMehaffey)
             Why risky? - (cwbrenn) - (2)
                 While I'm on the subject... - (cwbrenn) - (1)
                     I don't think your parts are "bad" - they just interact as - (Another Scott)
         Voltages et al. - (static) - (1)
             1.75 V. See 1st AMD .PDF link in "I don't think ..." above. -NT - (Another Scott)
         Various Answers - (JayMehaffey) - (2)
             family.model.step 6.4.2 - (cwbrenn) - (1)
                 whoops, ran report on wrong processor :P - (cwbrenn)

Chips, dips, chains, whips.
129 ms