Ian Hawkins, not content with bringing
AcornSearch to the RISC OS community, has now published his guide to overclocking a 200Mhz StrongARM RiscPC to over 300Mhz.
Although not recommended for the faint of heart (nor, indeed, anyone else for that matter), Ian used two peltier coolers either side of his StrongARM and got it running at 325Mhz, although it was unstable above 300Mhz.
Go to
Ian's explanation for details, including some cool photos.
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StrongARM overclocking |
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(12:04 21/1/2002) Guest (12:07 21/1/2002) Guest (12:29 21/1/2002) Anonymous (13:17 21/1/2002) John Hoare (13:34 21/1/2002) Richard Goodwin (13:37 21/1/2002) Guest (18:08 21/1/2002) Guest (23:02 21/1/2002) Guest (10:38 22/1/2002)
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Guest |
Message #89863, posted at 12:04, 21/1/2002 |
Unregistered user
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Erm, isn't adding all that cooling stuff *completely* over the top, considering Castle managed to do a run of StrongARMs overclocked to 300MHz with very little cooling. Quite frankly, you shouldn't need any more than a large heatsink. |
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Guest |
Message #89864, posted at 12:07, 21/1/2002, in reply to message #89863 |
Unregistered user
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Castle used specially rated ARMs, though. Ian's used a "vanilla" boring 200Mhz ARM in his madness.
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Guest |
Message #89865, posted at 12:29, 21/1/2002, in reply to message #89864 |
Unregistered user
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You miss the point. Being "over the top" was precisely Ian's intent. Take it for what it is - a bit of fun. |
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Anonymous |
Message #89866, posted at 13:17, 21/1/2002, in reply to message #89865 |
Unregistered user
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He's just jealous. |
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John Hoare |
Message #89867, posted at 13:34, 21/1/2002, in reply to message #89866 |
Unregistered user
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Hmmm.. any way of overclocking an Arm 7 to 300Mhz? :-) |
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Richard Goodwin |
Message #89868, posted at 13:37, 21/1/2002, in reply to message #89867 |
Unregistered user
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Or at least from 40 to 60Mhz (the same percentage increase from 200 to 300Mhz)? :) |
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Guest |
Message #89869, posted at 18:08, 21/1/2002, in reply to message #89868 |
Unregistered user
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I'd like to know what he's done to his VRam socket??? Mad chap!
Ian |
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Guest |
Message #89870, posted at 23:02, 21/1/2002, in reply to message #89869 |
Unregistered user
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Oh, er, that kind of broke, so I crunched the rest of it off with some pliers. Then soldered VRAM directly to the connector. I had dodgy VRAM (dry joints on the chip legs) and after 5 hours playing about with that I eventually gave up, and removed the rest. I'm now getting a ViewFinder :-) |
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Guest |
Message #89871, posted at 10:38, 22/1/2002, in reply to message #89870 |
Unregistered user
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What a f00l! |
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