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Part 3 |
After the BIOS upgrade my system boots with no problems. The good news is that not every motherboard needs a BIOS upgrade. For example, the PB 600 with the Phoenix BIOS 4.04 or greater will support the K6 processors, eliminating the need for a BIOS upgrade. So far, no one that I know of has tested the PB 600 with the K6 266 or 300 or K6-2. I would expect the K6 266 or 300 to work, however the K6-2 processors are questionable as they are a far newer technology. Until someone tries these combinations I cannot be sure as to what options work.
Well, my motherboard does not support any of the AMD processors; when I tried the AMD processors on my system it would not boot. This lack of support was done on purpose by the BIOS makers, to give you an Intel-only option. Fortunately, there is a way around this problem. I obtained a new BIOS from Unicore Software, the makers of Mr. BIOS. You can read my review of this BIOS on the Mr. BIOS review page of my site.
Before you choose an AMD processor for your PowerLeap, you should check the compatability of your BIOS. For Packard Bell systems see my chart for the latest information.
Because the K6-2 is a new technology, I needed to do the following tests with Wintune 98. I do not like Wintune 98 as I can no longer save and compare results. However, to get the AMD K6-2 to be detected correctly I have to use Wintune 98.
I have included results from an Intel 166 MHz processor, an Intel 233 MHz MMX processor and the results from the AMD K6-2 to compare. I had to use new data for the Intel 233, even though it was the same exact processor and PowerLeap adapter used in part 2 of this review. The new data was needed since I added more RAM, a new BIOS and I am using Wintune 98 for this test; any combination of these three factors could have contributed to the differences in the test results between the two reviews. The Intel 233, in part 2 of this review, had 435 for the CPU interger and 131 for the FPU; in this test the Intel 233 scored 648 for the CPU interger and 267 for the FPU.
I cannot be sure if this is a performance increase since the last test or if this is just due to the two versions of Wintune analyzing the CPU differently. Both could be possiblities, unfortunately I did not do enough testing in between the two reviews. Sorry.
The FPU also had a nice performance increase, going from 190MFLOPS for the Intel 166 to 267 MFLOPS for the Intel 233 and 347 MFLOPS for the AMD K6-2. Additionally, the the CPU Integer had an increase from 431 MIPS for the Intel 166 to 648 MIPS for the Intel 233 and 778 MIPS for the AMD K6-2. Both of these had reasonable increases in performance.
I uploaded these results to the online database Wintune 98 has and I found that the AMD K6-2 performs on par with other systems running this same chip at 66 MHz. I think the Wintune results show that there is no performance decrease from the PowerLeap adapter; the PowerLeap actually provides performace as our motherboards could never use this chip were it not for PowerLeap.