I had a Celeron e1200 dual core that I overclocked from stock 1.6gh to 3.4ghz 24/7. It's the only cpu that I more than doubled it's stock speed with overclocking. It destroyed friends P4's and Pentium D's. Previously, I had a Celeron D that I ran at 5.15ghz in the winter. The pc fit perfectly in my window frame and the Canadian winter handled the cooling!
Great video. Some Celerons can really be hidden gems, I'm loving my first Tualatin one so far. Its an 1100A and from my testing its a really capable chip, I was able to bump the FSB up to 133MHz (without any voltage adjustments) to get it running at 1466MHz with ease. The result is a fast and cheap CPU for the platform that's hardly cut down from the regular Pentium III, it even keeps the 8-way associative cache! Makes a great option if you don't care for the 512KB cache of the server grade Pentium IIIs.
31:34 You have to keep in mind that the fastest Pentium II with a 66Mhz fsb ran at 366MHz, so for anyone with a mainboard that only supports a 66MHz fsb, the Celeron 433 would be the fastest supported CPU.
You forgot the 500MHz version. It trades blows with a Celeron 300A @ 450MHz. And works fine in slotkets. The best CPU that I could put in my 440LX board.
@@dabombinablemi6188I didn’t forget exactly, I was just talking about processors in the slot 1 package. 66MHz FSB Celerons actually go as high as 766MHz on socket 370 if I remember correctly. Either way, for those of us with LX boards, Celerons are usually the fastest supported chips.
@@jonchapman6821 They did, though beyond 500MHz they were Coppermine. Boards such as my Asus P2L97 support a low enough voltage to run them safely - in fact even my Pentium III 650 ran quite cool on it (recognised as a Pentium II 433 however).
about once a year I dig out my old Mendocino's I've never had a 300a that would go higher than 450mhz. the 333 wont clock at 100mhz it locks up at the win98 boot screen. it'll clock at 75mhz @ a little over 400mhz . I tell people just get the 300a it will 99.9% clock to 450. you got very lucky on your 366. staying stable in the benchmarks. mine will lock under a heavy load. I have the same board. the P3B-F is a badass board. with the mod bios itll under clock so you can use the Coppermine 1ghz and some 1.2ghz
My first Celeron was 333A running at 475MHz on Tekram P6PRO MB, for some reason it was unable to reach 500MHz even with better cooling. Now I have about 20 300A, taken from old Cisco routers, all of them run at 450MHz on the same board.
@@NTGTechnology My mistake, not routers, but firewalls, Cisco PIX 500 series, maybe PIX-506. I used to drill the metallic covers for better ventilation, even swapped some 300A with P3 Coppermines for better performance. Older Cisco PIX use socket 7 CPUs, I have one with P 200MMX.
I think broke people that had AMD K6-2's and upgraded to celerons were the only people that would have liked them. They sucked so bad, and I doubt overclocking them changed much. I got older and had a 1ghz P3 coppermine in 2001 and after that an athlon XP so of course I see these as irrelevant. Cache matters a LOT. Honestly for the environment's sake I wish people would stop turning these computers on and scrap them. Ever try using 86box? It's pretty much the be-all end-all for all of this old computer crap. Trash it.
R.I.P Anandtech
ah yes, i too love overclocked cELERY
I had a Celeron e1200 dual core that I overclocked from stock 1.6gh to 3.4ghz 24/7. It's the only cpu that I more than doubled it's stock speed with overclocking. It destroyed friends P4's and Pentium D's.
Previously, I had a Celeron D that I ran at 5.15ghz in the winter. The pc fit perfectly in my window frame and the Canadian winter handled the cooling!
Nice. At some point I plan on overclocking some of the single core ones like the 420 and 430.
Great video. Some Celerons can really be hidden gems, I'm loving my first Tualatin one so far. Its an 1100A and from my testing its a really capable chip, I was able to bump the FSB up to 133MHz (without any voltage adjustments) to get it running at 1466MHz with ease. The result is a fast and cheap CPU for the platform that's hardly cut down from the regular Pentium III, it even keeps the 8-way associative cache! Makes a great option if you don't care for the 512KB cache of the server grade Pentium IIIs.
31:34 You have to keep in mind that the fastest Pentium II with a 66Mhz fsb ran at 366MHz, so for anyone with a mainboard that only supports a 66MHz fsb, the Celeron 433 would be the fastest supported CPU.
Man, a celery being the fastest on a platform is a wild thought!
@@racinggameschannel Now try and find a Celeron 433 in the slot 1 package, it’s not easy (I’m looking to pick one up)
You forgot the 500MHz version. It trades blows with a Celeron 300A @ 450MHz. And works fine in slotkets. The best CPU that I could put in my 440LX board.
@@dabombinablemi6188I didn’t forget exactly, I was just talking about processors in the slot 1 package.
66MHz FSB Celerons actually go as high as 766MHz on socket 370 if I remember correctly.
Either way, for those of us with LX boards, Celerons are usually the fastest supported chips.
@@jonchapman6821 They did, though beyond 500MHz they were Coppermine. Boards such as my Asus P2L97 support a low enough voltage to run them safely - in fact even my Pentium III 650 ran quite cool on it (recognised as a Pentium II 433 however).
This video feels a lot like a Druaga1 video for some reason!
Nah, not enough stuff went wrong
Dude, nice video and kudos to you starting this channel among hundreds of others.
Whick mic are you using when talking through the benchmarks ?
Some ancient mic a friend gave me for free lol. Somehow it's surprisingly decent.
Celery, Nice Touch
11:52 But Best Canadie To Overclock CPU And Best Motherboard
440BX Man!
What A Hero
It's weird that I made some videos telling the story just yesterday 😂
about once a year I dig out my old Mendocino's I've never had a 300a that would go higher than 450mhz.
the 333 wont clock at 100mhz it locks up at the win98 boot screen. it'll clock at 75mhz @ a little over 400mhz . I tell people just get the 300a it will 99.9% clock to 450. you got very lucky on your 366. staying stable in the benchmarks. mine will lock under a heavy load. I have the same board. the P3B-F is a badass board. with the mod bios itll under clock so you can use the Coppermine 1ghz and some 1.2ghz
My first Celeron was 333A running at 475MHz on Tekram P6PRO MB, for some reason it was unable to reach 500MHz even with better cooling. Now I have about 20 300A, taken from old Cisco routers, all of them run at 450MHz on the same board.
Do you happen to know which routers were they used in?
@@NTGTechnology My mistake, not routers, but firewalls, Cisco PIX 500 series, maybe PIX-506. I used to drill the metallic covers for better ventilation, even swapped some 300A with P3 Coppermines for better performance. Older Cisco PIX use socket 7 CPUs, I have one with P 200MMX.
The one Celerin 333a slot one I tried would not overclock, even on BX 440 chipset that did overclock a 300A
@@joelcarson4602 Mine was exactly 333A slot one and worker at 475MHz for years, still have it ;)
yeah i remmember the 300A but i never got it upto 450 i think only 366 which at the time i was impressed enough with.
Can I use your benchmark scores for reference in my upcoming video of the Coppermine Celeron?
Yeah I don't mind
@@NTGTechnology thank you sir, I will point you out, and I am grateful because I don't have any of the hardware you made the video with.
14:08 Also Asus Post Reporter
Mendocino? 1st thing that came to mind was Ryzen 7020 laptop, which was kinda meh
Fingers down for changing the title of the video and making clickbait.
The title is as I released it 15 minutes ago, I haven't changed anything.
you say this as if no one does clickbait now
I think broke people that had AMD K6-2's and upgraded to celerons were the only people that would have liked them. They sucked so bad, and I doubt overclocking them changed much. I got older and had a 1ghz P3 coppermine in 2001 and after that an athlon XP so of course I see these as irrelevant. Cache matters a LOT. Honestly for the environment's sake I wish people would stop turning these computers on and scrap them. Ever try using 86box? It's pretty much the be-all end-all for all of this old computer crap. Trash it.
bait