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- Path: mn5.swip.net!news
- From: stefan.johannesdal@mailbox.swipnet.se (Stefan Johannesdal)
- Newsgroups: comp.sys.amiga.hardware
- Subject: Re: A3000 speed upgrade?
- Date: 4 Feb 1996 23:52:56 GMT
- Organization: -
- Message-ID: <3937.6608T956T2882@mailbox.swipnet.se>
- References: <4f0v55$oin@astfgl.idb.hist.no>
- NNTP-Posting-Host: dialup100-6-5.swipnet.se
- X-Newsreader: THOR 2.22 (Amiga;TCP/IP) *UNREGISTERED*
-
-
- Roy Berg wrote about A3000 speed upgrade? here in comp.sys.amiga.hardware...
- > Is it possible to replace the CPU and crystals in my A3000
- > with 50MHz versions? (68030 50 MHz)
-
- No.
-
- > I saw that there is a hack to double the speed of the FPU
- > on the A3000, is there a similar hack for the CPU? (F.ex.
- > 25Mhz -> 28Mhz)
-
-
- ------------8<-------------------------
-
- *** Area: USE_HARDWARE Date: 11 Jan 94 13:15:50 ***
- From: Mike Noreen (92:901/231.14)
- *** To : All
- *** Subj: A3000 FPU run at 50Mhz successfully!
-
- I just thought I'd tell all A3000 owners something they might find
- interesting:
-
- I right now run my FPU at 50Mhz, and it works!
-
- I've been rendering a 300 frame animation for the last 24 hours to test the
- FPU, and sofar there's been no problems. The temperature in the room is 21
- degrees centigrade, and the temperature of the FPU is still under 40 degrees
- (according to a thermometer I left in the immediate vicinity of the FPU), so
- there doesn't seem to be any heat dissipation problems. I'll continue to
- render for a few days more to make absolutely sure the FPU can handle the
- doubled speed.
-
- According to AIBB I'm 11-96% faster than an ordinary 25Mhz A3000 on floating
- point (I assume the differences depend on the amount of memory accesses done
- by different types of tests). In the beachball test (the interesting one) I'm
- 40% faster than a 25Mhz A3000.
-
- SysInfo claims that I'm doing 1.1MFlops, as compared to the 0.66 I did before
- the hack.
-
- The beauty of this hack is that it didn't cost me a penny.
-
- This is the way it was done (thanks to Stefan Johannesdal for telling me how
- to do it!):
-
- 1) If you look at the motherboard from the front of the computer, you will see
- the FPU close to the front/middle of the computer. Locate pin 11 (it's the
- second from right on the far side of the 68882). From this pin a copper wire
- goes out then right, and then disappears down through the card on the right
- side of the FPU. This wire is the FPUCLK (or CLK30), and has to be cut
- (preferrably on the underside of the motherboard. It resurfaces one cm to the
- right of where it went down, and me and my more soldering experienced friend
- cut it between these two points).
-
- 2) Locate resistor R120 (22 ohm). It's just left of the 50Mhz crystal, and the
- far side of this resistor is to be connected to the FPUCLK pin of the 68882.
- We did it this way: we soldered a wire on the underside of the card from the
- point where the wire after the R120 goes through the motherboard, to the point
- where the FPUCLK wire from pin 11 went through the motherboard the first time.
-
- That's it. We tried to do it neatly, and to make it as hard to spot as
- possible for service technicians (I've still got warranty...maybe), but if
- that's not a concern you can simply solder a wire between R120 and the FPUCLK
- pin, after cutting the FPUCLK wire. The greatest problem was actually
- dismantling/reassembling the A3000...
-
- *************************************************************************** If
- anyone got any programme which tests the reliability of FPU's, I would GREATLY
- appreciate it if you'd UUencode and mail them to me! PLEASE!
- ***************************************************************************
-
- UUencoded AIBB module available on request.
-
-
- DISCLAIMER: I am not responsible for any errors which might have gotten into
- this post, or for any mistakes you might do when trying to repeat this hack,
- nor for any damage it might cause. It works for me, on my A3000, but there's
- no guarantee it will work for you. Don't try this unless you're absolutely
- sure that you can handle it. This hack pushes the FPU beyond it's specs, and
- might shorten the FPUs lifespan, and cause computational errors. I have no
- indication this is the case, but it is a definite possibility.
-
-
- MVH: Mike Noreen InterNet: radharc@p14.anet.bbs.bad.se
- FidoNet: 2:201/411.14
-
- -----8<-----
-
-
- Mvh - Stefan -
-
-