SuperStarr
PCAXE Addicted
- Učlanjen(a)
- 06.04.2009.
- Poruka
- 1.342
- Rezultat reagovanja
- 0
Moja konfiguracija
CPU & cooler:
AMD DA-C2 @ 3,66Ghz (1.4V) under Alpenföhn Broken
Motherboard:
DFI LANParty JR 790GX-M2RS @ 1,8Ghz
RAM:
4x 2Gb "Crne Dragane" @ 866Mhz CL5 1.95V
VGA & cooler:
PCS 6770 1Gb feat. Scythe Musashi + PAPST 12cm @ 5V
Display:
ASUS VW222U
HDD:
1x Maxtor, 3x WD, 1x Hitachi
Sound:
SB0460 feat. Creative Fatal1ty Gaming Headset
Case:
kinez čisto da zašrafim ploču da se ne krivi...
PSU:
ZM850-HP
Optical drives:
LiteOn always & forever :P
Mice & keyboard:
GA GM-M6800 & Microsoft Multimedia 1.0A
Internet:
Telekom ADSL 1Mbps
OS & Browser:
xDark W7 x64 SP1 /// Google Chrome
Other:
2x Doggy Dog ?
Earlier this year, a Korean source had pointed out an easy method to enable a fourth core on the Phenom II X3. This was made possible by the way AMD has been designing its triple-core and dual-core processors based on the K10 "Stars" architecture: by disabling one or two cores on the quad-core die. "Sloppy" BIOS coding lead to the Phenom II X3 anomaly. It looks like a somewhat similar mod enables not one, but two cores on the sub-$100 Athlon X2 7750 Black Edition. A Korean technology website GiggleHD.com has reported a successful unlock of two cores.
The method is similar to that of the Phenom II X3 unlock: using flaws in BIOS code to enable cores, by enabling the "Advanced Clock Calibration" feature in the BIOS setup. The OS, Windows XP SP3, was able to see the processor as a "AMD Phenom(tm) FX-7750", while CPU-Z reads the name string correctly and lists the core count as 4. The motherboard in use is an ASRock A790GX/128M.
http://gigglehd.com/zbxe/2245916#12