I don't know you can make that determination with visual inspection (except for maybe the date of the CPU, if all CPUs after a certain date are locked, but I'm not so sure that's the case, though it might be).
that barton is probably unlocked but what is the second line of the stepping. for example AQXEA 0330XPMW - if it's a late week like 0341 or 0343 then it's probably locked.
like mmonnin said, if the 1900 is a palomino core then it's locked but if it's a Tbred then it's unlocked. The palomino core is a square while the Tbred has a rectangle.
k guys i guess ill yank the heatsinks and find out what the steppings are and then post them
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Mt_GoatHead Cheezy KnobPflugerville (north of Austin)Icrontian
edited December 2003
Don't bother pulling the HS from the 1900 as they were only made on the Palomino core and as thus are locked. AMD never did make the 1900 on any of the T'Bred cores.
profdlp had this to say ...you tell by the stepping in wcpuid?
Mackanz had this to say Nope.
What's missing? Does the stepping indicated in wcpuid just tell you the "family", and is too general?
Any way of determining it with a program? I've gotten wiser and now write everything down whenever I get a new CPU, but it would be nice to be able to check things with having to take everything apart.
As far as i know, there is no way to check the stepping on any software as i think Amd isn't programming the steppings in the cpu's in the first place. (i'm thinking of the rebadged thortons and durons) At least not yet.
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Mt_GoatHead Cheezy KnobPflugerville (north of Austin)Icrontian
edited December 2003
profdlp had this to say
profdlp had this to say ...you tell by the stepping in wcpuid?
Mackanz had this to say Nope.
What's missing? Does the stepping indicated in wcpuid just tell you the "family", and is too general?
Any way of determining it with a program? I've gotten wiser and now write everything down whenever I get a new CPU, but it would be nice to be able to check things with having to take everything apart.
I made it even easier and take a picture of all my new chips.
Me older= yes, wiser= when I want to be.
BTW
I have to take a picture to be able to read that itty bitty print anyway. Another fact of being older.
mtgoat had this to say I have to take a picture to be able to read that itty bitty print anyway. Another fact of being older.
Good idea! I have had better than 20/20 vision my whole life until last year. I just broke down and got a pair of reading glasses last week, it was either that or get my arms stretched...
:wow2:
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Mt_GoatHead Cheezy KnobPflugerville (north of Austin)Icrontian
edited December 2003
profdlp had this to say
mtgoat had this to say I have to take a picture to be able to read that itty bitty print anyway. Another fact of being older.
Good idea! I have had better than 20/20 vision my whole life until last year. I just broke down and got a pair of reading glasses last week, it was either that or get my arms stretched...
:wow2:
LOL, I know the feeling. I had 20/10 most of my life and recently went to 20/15 and lost a bit of my close up ability. I probably shoud get some reading glasses too. Maybe that's why I don't feel like reading books as much lately but on my screen I can read all day.
LawnMM had this to say Just go into the bios, select user define, see if you can change the multiplier...
Easy as pie!
Make sure it actually changes. My old A7N let me change the multi, but it reset it back to default when it restarted, and gave no indication that it had done that (till I check CPU-Z in Windows..)
Templar had this to say Make sure it actually changes. My old A7N let me change the multi, but it reset it back to default when it restarted, and gave no indication that it had done that (till I check CPU-Z in Windows..)
That's what happens on the old lady's Asus A7A266, and on my MSI KT4V. It's FSB or nothing...
Well that's easy to chesk though. A friend gave me some info that low batch cores is pretty hot at low voltage. Is that the case with you as well? Voltage and temps?
Comments
Omega?
like mmonnin said, if the 1900 is a palomino core then it's locked but if it's a Tbred then it's unlocked. The palomino core is a square while the Tbred has a rectangle.
Any way of determining it with a program? I've gotten wiser and now write everything down whenever I get a new CPU, but it would be nice to be able to check things with having to take everything apart.
Me older= yes, wiser= when I want to be.
BTW
I have to take a picture to be able to read that itty bitty print anyway. Another fact of being older.
:wow2:
Easy as pie!
Make sure it actually changes. My old A7N let me change the multi, but it reset it back to default when it restarted, and gave no indication that it had done that (till I check CPU-Z in Windows..)
AXDA2500KV4D 9822457270001
AQXEA 0331RPMW
is it unlocked?
If it has all those lines in it, its locked. If not its unlocked.
I guessed a "Y" week 30 or 31. And you have a "9" week 31. Not bad at all.
BUT WTF????
Are you sure about the last lines in the first row? It ends with 0001. REALLY sure?
OMG, that's like winning the lottery. Congrats, you have a cpu from the best spot on the wafer. I´m guessing 2.6 on good air actually. Is it for sale?