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- Path: sparky!uunet!spool.mu.edu!sdd.hp.com!hpscit.sc.hp.com!matthias
- From: matthias@nsr.hp.com (Matthias Kamm)
- Newsgroups: comp.sys.intel
- Subject: Re: Can 16MHz 80387 be installed in a 33MHz 80386 system?
- Date: 17 Dec 1992 22:39:09 GMT
- Organization: Hewlett Packard Santa Clara Site
- Lines: 24
- Distribution: world
- Message-ID: <1gqvidINNiel@hpscit.sc.hp.com>
- References: <1gn8voINN1fg@iraul1.ira.uka.de>
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-
- |S| Norbert Juffa (S_JUFFA@iravcl.ira.uka.de) wrote:
- : In <1992Dec15.101259.6401@sei.cmu.edu> griest@ajpo.sei.cmu.edu writes:
- :
- : > I have been told that you can install a 16MHz '387DX in a coprocessor
- : > socket to work with a 33MHz '386DX and it will work ok (running Math
- : > instructions at the 16MHz rate). I am not convinced. Has anyone done
- : > this? How does it work? Are their any jumpers that must be set?
- : >
- : > Tom
- : >
- :
- You're probably mixing up the 287 with the 387. The 286 coprocessor, the
- 287, runs asyncronously to the motherboard clock, and therefore can be
- used at different speeds than the main cpu clock. In fact, my 4 year
- old 386 20Mhz motherboard has a 287 socket in it, and I'm using an Am287
- 12Mhz. It works great, and is cheap as heck ;->
-
- The 387 is syncronous, and therefore must be rated at the same speed as
- the motherboard cpu i.e. you need a 387DX-33.
-
- It's possible, however, that Intel's 16Mhz rated coprocessors will actually
- run at 33Mhz. It's just not guaranteed and tested to that rating. If
- you have one, just plug it in and try it out (16Mhz is yawning by todays
- submicron silicon standards, so I wouldn't at all be suprised if it works).
-