hmm my e6300 had a 480fsb wall, and I remember a few other people with e6300 having a 480fsb wall as well. x7, x6, x5, all walled at 480. Too bad I didn't know about the mod eh?
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hmm my e6300 had a 480fsb wall, and I remember a few other people with e6300 having a 480fsb wall as well. x7, x6, x5, all walled at 480. Too bad I didn't know about the mod eh?
This only works on the E2XXX and E4XXX serie ;).
http://i60.photobucket.com/albums/h1...r/200to333.jpg
And this maybe handy ;).
http://tweakers.net/ext/f/cdaf1e9144...e2952/full.jpg
I tried the 333FSB mod on my E2160, but it didn't go like i wanted. So i don't know if it works ;) .
So this will get me over my motherboards wall?
Is it ok if I connect the vcc and vss together with the bsel1 and bsel2 together like this:
[IMG]http://i164.photobucket.com/albums/u.../200to3331.jpg[/IMG]
After several bios updates on my Asus P5N-E SLI board, the 1066FSB BSEL mod finally works on my E4300, I've keep the mod on the chip for months now and it has never made any difference to my 375MHz FSB wall, not 1MHz higher.
After update to bios 0608 the FSB is at 380MHz tested fully stable, only 5MHz increase but better than nothing I guess, removing the mod results in the same 375MHz FSB wall confirming that it does work with the latest bios.
I've not tried the 1333MHz BSEL mod as the space between the two traces are so close together it's difficult seperating the traces even with tape over one line of trace to paint the outer line.
The new bios for the S3 (F12) brought my OC down from 369 to like 359. I sort of think it may be the vdrop but I don't know how accurate CPU-Z is. I may get a cheap multimeter or something. Any suggestions?
It could just be that I got a not-so-great board.