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changing the processor

PostPosted: May 17, 2002 @ 5:10am
by Jadam

PostPosted: May 17, 2002 @ 6:58am
by Kzinti

PostPosted: May 17, 2002 @ 7:43am
by Chris Edwards

PostPosted: May 17, 2002 @ 7:51am
by Kzinti

PostPosted: May 17, 2002 @ 9:20am
by BurningSheep

PostPosted: May 17, 2002 @ 12:40pm
by eminefes
LMAO :D

PostPosted: May 17, 2002 @ 4:28pm
by ingallsj
You would need to able to do precision soldering on the silicon. Good luck! :roll:

PostPosted: May 17, 2002 @ 7:10pm
by Jadam

PostPosted: May 17, 2002 @ 9:17pm
by James S

PostPosted: May 17, 2002 @ 9:21pm
by Fish

PostPosted: May 17, 2002 @ 11:47pm
by ingallsj

PostPosted: May 18, 2002 @ 2:30am
by R0B
thereticly it would work if the buss speed was the same or the xscale could automaticly reduce it's speed to adjust to the current bus speed, i.e 206 mhz.

PostPosted: May 18, 2002 @ 4:48am
by Jadam

PostPosted: May 18, 2002 @ 5:20am
by Annoying Snails Master

PostPosted: May 18, 2002 @ 7:55pm
by R0B
My thery is that you could change the processor, if you didn't mind it running at 206 mhz (i.e. underclocked). Isn't it the bus speeds that cause it to crash if you overclock these devices to 233? I thought that it was, but maybe it is a protection mechanism when the processor overheats?