486DX475 (25Mhz FSB still):
Had to buy an EPROM programmer (TL866-3G) to program a BIOS chip for it, since there's a known bug with the DX4 ODP's and this computer where the L1 cache gets completely disabled and it performs like this:
That arrived today. The difference is STARK.
Then, I threw caution to the wind and decided to do the resistor mod. Unsoldered R176 and bridged the contacts for 174 and 175, didn't use resistors as Thermalwrong on Vogons was confident they were just used due to the machine assembling the board. SUCCESS!! 486 DX4-100 action now:
Also have the VRAM upgrade installed, so it has 1MB of video RAM (posted in the pics thread). With the DX4 100 it gets 29.43FPS in the Doom high graphics test, which is completely playable.
Had to buy an EPROM programmer (TL866-3G) to program a BIOS chip for it, since there's a known bug with the DX4 ODP's and this computer where the L1 cache gets completely disabled and it performs like this:
That arrived today. The difference is STARK.
Then, I threw caution to the wind and decided to do the resistor mod. Unsoldered R176 and bridged the contacts for 174 and 175, didn't use resistors as Thermalwrong on Vogons was confident they were just used due to the machine assembling the board. SUCCESS!! 486 DX4-100 action now:
Also have the VRAM upgrade installed, so it has 1MB of video RAM (posted in the pics thread). With the DX4 100 it gets 29.43FPS in the Doom high graphics test, which is completely playable.