OK GUYS FOUND THIS CLICK ME
OK GUYS FOUND THIS CLICK ME
Mine looks like this
Athlon XP Processor
Core Barton
CPU Model 10
Manufacturing Process 130 nm
Approximate Transistor Count 54.3 million
Approximate Die Size 101 sq. mm
Performance Rating 2500+
Working frequency 1833 MHz
Package Type OPGA
Operating Voltage 1.65 V
Max Die Temperature 85° C
L1 Cache Size 128 KB
L2 Cache Size 512 KB
Multiplier 11x
FSB Frequency 333 MHz
Stepping Code AQZEA
Manufacture Year 2003
Manufacture Week 32
Production Batch M
Batch Production Number 0536
I saw that before and it is interesting. It used to tell you what your CPU was 'clocked down from' but I think they removed that because it seemed unreliable and noone could see how they could tell that.
ah, this was what I was looking for. I lost it with the rest of my favourites when my hard drive failed
thanks
Desktop: AMD Athlon XP 2500+ Barton, 1024Mb PC-3200 TwinMOS w/Winbond, MSI K7N2 Delta-ILSR, Radeon 9800SE AIW, 40 GB 7,200 Rpm Hitachi Deskstar, 120GB 7,200 Rpm 8mb Cache Maxtor Diamond 9, 160GB 7200 Rpm 8mb Cache Seagate 7200.7 SATA, Plextor 708A 8x DVD-RW, 550W PFC Q-tec PSU, Casetek 1019SM Silver Case, Camdridge Soundworks DTT2200 Speakers
Laptop: Clevo D470W - 17" Widescreen TFT, Intel Pentium4 3.06Ghz 533FSB, 1024Mb PC-2700 Hynix, Radeon Mobility 9000 64Mb, Fujitsu 80Gb 4,200rpm, 250Gb 7,2000rpm 8mb Cache Maxtor OneTouch, Toshiba SD-R6372 DVD-RW +/- x4, Built-in Four speakers, webcam and microphone
Yea, it was stating that Barton core CPU's were clocked down from a Tbred and so on :/Originally posted by Austin
I saw that before and it is interesting. It used to tell you what your CPU was 'clocked down from' but I think they removed that because it seemed unreliable and noone could see how they could tell that.
Living and dying laughing and crying
Once you have seen it you will never be the same
Life in the fast lane is just how it seems
Hard and it is heavy dirty and mean
I found out how they work out what your CPU was 'clocked down from' back when I was researching the JIUHBs, trying to see if I should get one (Which I did ). It was rumoured that the 8th and 9th digits in the second of three series of characters on AMD CPUs indicated what the core was intended to be, as in, what the CPU was downgraded from. For example, for my JIUHB, the second series is 9391057260050, so, by the rumour, my CPU was intended to be an XP2600+. However, I read that a source at AMD explained that these two digits, which varied between 24 and 28, if I recall correctly, indicated the laser marker ID, or something like that.Originally posted by Austin
I saw that before and it is interesting. It used to tell you what your CPU was 'clocked down from' but I think they removed that because it seemed unreliable and noone could see how they could tell that.
A page that tells you how to work out the same info that the script does, explains the 'downgraded from' rumour more fully, and gives an indication as to which JIUHBs to go for, can be found at http://eldren.freeshell.org/athlonxp/
Sadly, the original site is gone, and this is all that I had in my cache.
My eyes hurt ffs! That's too small to read, I also had to take the dust off!
Athlon Thunderbird
CPU Model 4
Manufacturing Process 180 nm
Approximate Transistor Count 37 million
Approximate Die Size 120 sq. mm
Working frequency 1333 MHz
Package Type CPGA
Operating Voltage 1.75 V
Max Die Temperature 95° C
L1 Cache Size 128 KB
L2 Cache Size 256 KB
Multiplier 10x
FSB Frequency 266 MHz
Stepping Code AYHJA
Manufacture Year 2001
Manufacture Week 29
Production Batch W
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