The Celery Report: Issue #2

by Russ Stringham on January 11, 1999 2:44 PM EST

Cooking the Celery

A quick aside for those who have a stubborn chip. We've all heard of the "Celery Sandwich" from Computernerd. This cooler is based on the idea that with some processors it is necessary to cool the area on the PCB directly behind the silicon on the back. This is, however, a rather expensive solution. On this topic, I received this rather enlightening e-mail, with a low-cost alternative, from Peter Varga:

"When I first tried to overclock my Celeron, Windows crashed on boot. After reading your article, I just found out I have the COMPEQ version. Week 35. I didn't change the voltage.. and all I did was a add a small 486 fan to the BACK of the CPU (I have no case so it was a breeze). And guess what.. works beautifully.

"I had an uptime of about 2 days without crashes after which point I decided it was stable. Remember, no voltage change..just added a small fan to the back of the CPU.

"Windows won't even start without the fan."

So, before you give up on your CPU, try Peter's solution.

I test each CPU under initial identical conditions prior to "burning in" my combos. I do an initial test run using the same Abit BH6, same RAM (single stick 64MB Micron, CAS3) and the same video card, a Trident 975, 4MB AGP.

For those who are interested, this is a very fast 2D card that consistently scores better than 5 in Final Reality. Not very good in 3D, but for a business system, it’s a screaming bargain.

I use an old 270MB Quantum hard drive (actually have 3 set up identically, so I can burn multiple combos at once). I use an old hard drive because I assume that these setups will be going in to a variety of situations with a variety of drives and that if it’ll work with this clunker, it’ll probably work anywhere.

I run a quick test at 450 using Business Winstone 97. Why such an old version, you might ask? Because I’m not testing for performance, only stability. This works perfectly for that purpose. If it fails, I bump the core voltage up a notch until it passes.

If the CPU won’t do 450 or requires more than 2.2v core, I set it aside for later evaluation. After passing the first test on my evaluation board, I move the chip to the motherboard with which it will be mated.

I put each one through 6 full rounds of Winstone and 2 hours of Final Reality. By using these two tests, I’m covering both the 2D business users and the 3D gamers. As an aside, for those who haven’t used it, Final Reality is not only a great test, it is visually stunning.

One glitch at current voltage, and it’s bumped up a notch, until it’s completely stable. Because I believe that stability means having a little breathing room, I don’t sell a chip at 450 if it requires more than 2.2v core to stabilize.

Now, this week's results....

The BH6 and Memory This Week's Results
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