Other than the price.
I've done a general upgrade of several of my systems recently. Almost everything is a bargain these days. RAM is practically free. The KT133A chipset costs about the same as the KT133 and is a great performer. Incredibly fast CPU's can be gotten for under $250.00.
I bought a 1.2 GHz Athlon-B (200 MHz FSB) a few weeks ago. The L1 bridges are in intact, and it runs happily at either 200 or 266 MHz. The motherboard it sits on, an Abit KT7A, doesn't appear to care about the FSB speeds. It toggles between 1200 MHz at 200 or 266 without the user having to manually adjust the multiplier.
I bought a 266 MHz FSB Athon-C this week. Again, the L1 Bridges appear to be intact, and I get the feeling that if I were to install it on the Abit board, it would handle clock speeds and multipliers in much the same way as the 200 MHz FSB TBird.
Review sites, of course cite the differences as the 200 MHz "B" chip runs on a 200 MHz FSB, while the 266 MHz "C" chip runs at 266 MHz. (I bet they all had to call MIT's engineering department to get that explanation.) Well, its certainly accurate. In fact, it displays a remarkably firm grasp of the obvious. But it doesn't address my question: with the L1 bridges intact, and this appears to be the norm with the 1.2 GHz CPU, is there a difference between the "B" and "C" chips?
By the way, I specifically ordered a blue core Athlon this time around. It's so pretty, I can barely bring myself to install it.
Paul
paulcs@flashcom.net
[This message has been edited by paulcs (edited 15 March 2001).]
I've done a general upgrade of several of my systems recently. Almost everything is a bargain these days. RAM is practically free. The KT133A chipset costs about the same as the KT133 and is a great performer. Incredibly fast CPU's can be gotten for under $250.00.
I bought a 1.2 GHz Athlon-B (200 MHz FSB) a few weeks ago. The L1 bridges are in intact, and it runs happily at either 200 or 266 MHz. The motherboard it sits on, an Abit KT7A, doesn't appear to care about the FSB speeds. It toggles between 1200 MHz at 200 or 266 without the user having to manually adjust the multiplier.
I bought a 266 MHz FSB Athon-C this week. Again, the L1 Bridges appear to be intact, and I get the feeling that if I were to install it on the Abit board, it would handle clock speeds and multipliers in much the same way as the 200 MHz FSB TBird.
Review sites, of course cite the differences as the 200 MHz "B" chip runs on a 200 MHz FSB, while the 266 MHz "C" chip runs at 266 MHz. (I bet they all had to call MIT's engineering department to get that explanation.) Well, its certainly accurate. In fact, it displays a remarkably firm grasp of the obvious. But it doesn't address my question: with the L1 bridges intact, and this appears to be the norm with the 1.2 GHz CPU, is there a difference between the "B" and "C" chips?
By the way, I specifically ordered a blue core Athlon this time around. It's so pretty, I can barely bring myself to install it.
Paul
paulcs@flashcom.net
[This message has been edited by paulcs (edited 15 March 2001).]
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