Celeron II 600 @ 1Ghz Review
Overclock Warehouse provides a unique service
to the casual overclocker, or to the person in the know,
who wants a simpler process, a guarantee, and is willing
to pay for someone else's "legwork". They sell
pre-tested bundles, guaranteed to function at a higher
clockrate. We've tested a few of their gems in the past
here, and they haven't missed target yet.

Today we look at their Celeron2
600 bundle with an OEM CC0 stepping Celeron2-600, and a
Global Win FOP38 guaranteed to overclock to 1008mhz (112
FSBx9.5) on a 1.85v core.
The Global Win
FOP38 heatsink is a big part of making it to that high a
clock speed. Essentially the FOP32, but with a higher
output 7200 rpm 60mm fan pushing 38CFM or air! Not the
quietest fan in the world, but inside a case already
jammed with five 80mm fans, it's unnoticeable here. :)
To take advantage
of such an overclocked bundle, even with a guarantee,
you still have to have a decent board to put it in, and
memory that can handle whatever the FSB speed needs to
be. In the case of Celeron2's in particular, with their
high multiplier-to-FSB ratio, obtaining a higher core
speed can be accomplished with a much lower FSB than a
P3 overclock. You lose some performance in comparison of
course, but then again, taking a P3-700 to 143FSB to get
at 1Ghz takes more of a mainboard, and more out of your
memory, than in our case taking a Celeron2-600 to 1Ghz
which can be done at 112Mhz FSB. In all likelihood, your
ol' BX board, and cheapo stick of PC-100 will make it
just fine, thereby saving extra cash.
My personal testbed
mainboard, and currently my favorite board, is the Asus
CUSL2. Already a known stable overclocker, running at
this moment @ 143FSB with a stick of PC150 SDRAM, I
expect pushing the Celeron2 to 1Ghz to be a walk in the
park, and I wasn't disappointed.
I followed the
Overclock Warehouse recommendations, installed the
processor/heatsink and run it at 600 first, mainly just
to verify that I'm not an idiot. :) All it took was a
warm reboot, a quick peek in the BIOS to change FSB to
112Mhz, and core to 1.85V and I was once again greeted
with a stable and fast Windows desktop. I've said it
before about their guaranteed bundles, but it's true, it
just doesn't get any simpler than this!
Next page: How fast is it?
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