Originally posted by: VirtualLarry
I missed out on getting that board from Compgeeks myself, it sold out faster than I expected.
Anyways, there are three primary issues related to compatibility.
One is the electrical/physical pinout compatibility. Both are S478, so that shouldn't be an issue.
Two is the power/cooling support, generally in terms of how powerful the mobo's CRU VRMs are, and how good your overall cooling setup is. Prescotts take a lot more power than Northwoods, or at least compared to early Northwood designs, so Intel had to come out with a new spec for mobos to properly support the
full line of S478 Prescott CPUs. Now, this is a Celly-D we're talking about, which has less cache, and takes less power, than a full-blown P4, so this will be less of an issue, although it could still be a minor one and limit your possible overall overclock due to power issues.
Third is BIOS. All Intel (and AMD, etc) CPUs have "bugs" in them. Ever since the PPro era, Intel added the ability to "patch" some of those CPU bugs, by implementing downloadable microcode. This has to be loaded into the CPU by the BIOS when the system boots. Some software may be more-or-less affected by those bugs. For example, Windows XP SP2, requires an up-to-date BIOS microcode for Prescott CPUs to operate properly. Most BIOSes these days are implemented from a somewhat generic Award-BIOS OEM core, that is then customized for each mobo maker. The BIOS is modular, and with appropriate "BIOS hacking" tools, you can extract the module responsible for holding the microcode updates, and swap one with another, assuming that there is enough room in the BIOS to hold the bigger tables. So for example, if you took the recent 7/2004 BIOS release for the AOpen "Max II" version of this board (which officially supports Prescott CPUs), and extracted the microcode tables, and then inserted them into the BIOS for this board, I think that it should work. (This has worked before for many other boards in a similar manner.)
But because the board wasn't designed to support the power-consumption of Prescott S478 CPUs, and they have a newer-model board that they sell that does, AOpen is very unlikely to ever officially give you any support for running a Celly-D in this board. The BIOS-hackers on the forum at
Wim's BIOS should be able to help more, they do this sort of thing all of the time for people.