CPU Museum

November 10, 2006

Pentium III - 800Mhz 2 variants


Donated by the group IT guys at Golley Slater, I now have in my possession to types of Slot 1 Pentium III's running at 800MHz. They are both Coppermine CPU's (256KB of Level 2 cache), one running with the 100MHz Front side bus and another with the faster 133MHz FSB.

While the SECC2 cartridge package in which they are housed is a beautiful bit of design, it isn't as solid in construction as the old SECC1, in fact it's positively flimsy.

The move to Slot1 was prompted when Intel lacked the technology to get the level 2 cache on chip, so a larger module was required. This coupled with fact that imitators may have wanted to compete with them and utilise their next socket after Socket 7, meant that a completely different contact method flumoxed the likes of Winchip and Cyrix. Even AMD, who had the same problem with initial designs of the Athlon moved to a Single Edge Contact Cartridge but no one ever copied the Intel design.

By the time these chips were released, Socket 370 had blossomed into the mainstay for many years (the Celeron was produced with it's cache on board earlier on, due to being only 128kB).

At 800MHz, these chips with runs most apps today, they don't struggle with Windows XP, Office 2003 or any DVD or MP3 players. You wouldn't want to game with it tho...

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