Re: Best Tualatin Socket 370 Motherboard?
Difference between Asus TUSL2-C and CUSL2-C as far as Tualatin goes is several things.
- CUSL2-C does not have B-stepping i815 chipset. (Or not guaranteed to.)
- CUSL2-C does not have proper VRM circuit for Tualatin. VRM 8.5 spec is required. Tualatin uses a different and lower Vcore voltage than coppermine and earlier chips. Also Tualatin CPU uses a previously reserved pin as a VTT_PWR_GOOD outputs from CPU to VRM controller chip. AGTL is also lower by 1/4 volt. (There are some other minor differences.)
- Because the first two 'officially' make CUSL2-C not Tualatin compatible it's unlikely Asus updated the microcode in the BIOS to correctly ID and support a Tualatin.
Those socket adapters that let Tualatins work in Coppermine boards
- The cheap ones get around the pin and voltage problems but that's about it.
- The 'good' ones usually cost more than a good used Mobo+CPU.
In so far as the "III-S" Tualatins with 512k cache.
There are a lot of boards that hoot and hollar in ads about supporting Tualatin but if you dig a little sometimes you find in documentation ("Supported CPUs") that they only claim to support Tualatin with 256k cache or the Tualatin-Celerons.
I've found some will actually take 512k when it's not in the CPU list and others won't.
For example last week I got an Intel "Kittyhawk" board in (OEM for Gateway) and it seems to only support Tualatin-Celeron versions. Won't even boot with a PIII-S installed.
I've also run across i815 boards that have the proper B-step chipset but that still won't run a Tualatin (won't even boot with one installed) because the board is non-compliant in some other way.
You need to watch it on Mobo+CPU deals that have a non-officially compliant Mobo coupled with a Tualatin. There are several mods/hacks to get it to work that involve drilling out CPU socket holes or clipping pins on the CPU.
The best way to avoid problems is to find a board that 'officially' supports PIII-S.
.
Difference between Asus TUSL2-C and CUSL2-C as far as Tualatin goes is several things.
- CUSL2-C does not have B-stepping i815 chipset. (Or not guaranteed to.)
- CUSL2-C does not have proper VRM circuit for Tualatin. VRM 8.5 spec is required. Tualatin uses a different and lower Vcore voltage than coppermine and earlier chips. Also Tualatin CPU uses a previously reserved pin as a VTT_PWR_GOOD outputs from CPU to VRM controller chip. AGTL is also lower by 1/4 volt. (There are some other minor differences.)
- Because the first two 'officially' make CUSL2-C not Tualatin compatible it's unlikely Asus updated the microcode in the BIOS to correctly ID and support a Tualatin.
Those socket adapters that let Tualatins work in Coppermine boards
- The cheap ones get around the pin and voltage problems but that's about it.
- The 'good' ones usually cost more than a good used Mobo+CPU.
In so far as the "III-S" Tualatins with 512k cache.
There are a lot of boards that hoot and hollar in ads about supporting Tualatin but if you dig a little sometimes you find in documentation ("Supported CPUs") that they only claim to support Tualatin with 256k cache or the Tualatin-Celerons.
I've found some will actually take 512k when it's not in the CPU list and others won't.
For example last week I got an Intel "Kittyhawk" board in (OEM for Gateway) and it seems to only support Tualatin-Celeron versions. Won't even boot with a PIII-S installed.
I've also run across i815 boards that have the proper B-step chipset but that still won't run a Tualatin (won't even boot with one installed) because the board is non-compliant in some other way.
You need to watch it on Mobo+CPU deals that have a non-officially compliant Mobo coupled with a Tualatin. There are several mods/hacks to get it to work that involve drilling out CPU socket holes or clipping pins on the CPU.
The best way to avoid problems is to find a board that 'officially' supports PIII-S.
.
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