FiringSquad: Home of the Hardcore Gamer - Games, Hardware, Reviews and NewsSubmit your own or view users' CPU overclocking results!

  
 Home   News   THE MATRIX   Deals   Hardware   Games   Features   Media   Products   Forums   FS China 
AddThis Social Bookmark Button

Home : Guides : Choosing Components : FS Cooling Guide: CPU Cooling
» Join the Greatest Gaming Community NOW! (It's free)

Already a member? Login
 



Random Gallery >> 
Click to view high-res Image!
Total War: Shogun 2 Fall of the Samurai March 2012 Screenshots [13] (0)

CRANG That S#!T Up! (15) by ElwinRansom
HOW I CRANK THAT S#!T UP!! (4) by nvidia4life
My First Video (3) by Stryker
My Entry For The Contest. (6) by D4rk Force
Crank That S#!t Up!!!! (6) by CamoDaGreat
Crank THIS sH!t up! - 3DforREAL (71) by nGAGE
Crankin' it up today... and tomorrow! (8) by Slipdisk
Nvidia+Socom Cranks that $#%^ UP!!!!! (4) by mrinfinit3
[FX] 3-Screen Effect - Guide (part-1) (0) by nGAGE
Superlative Computer (6) by arvernis

More Blogs >>




FS Cooling Guide: CPU Cooling
May 20, 1999   Tim Hsu > [View My Other Articles]
Product Info | User Reviews | Article Images(5) | Image Gallery | Comments | Forum Thread
FS Cooling Guide: CPU Cooling

FS Cooling Guide: CPU Cooling [ The P3 TF by Tennmax @ 600 x 376 ] > View Full-Size in another window.
The P3 TF by Tennmax

Pentium IIs ushered in a new era of aftermarket cooling. They had millions of transistors on them, causing the first-generation Klamath core PII's running on a 2.8V core voltage to run very hot. The anemic coolers that Intel provided with their retail boxes steered many do-it-yourselfers towards the OEM versions of PII's, which came free of fan and heatsink. Then, the aftermarket selection was and still is quite varied for the various models of PII's.

SECC what?

If you have a PII and intend on buying an aftermarket fan, make sure you get one for the PII. While this is perfectly ridiculous logic, there are a lot of Slot-1 fans out there. Don't forget, Slot-1 encompasses Celerons, PII's, and PIII's. While the CPU interface is similar, the CPU's housing are different so you need to get the right fan that will fit well and provide good contact with the CPU. PII's can be in one of two interfaces: SECC-1 or SECC-2. SECC stands for Single Edge Contact Cartridge, and defines the PII and PIII's "housing". SECC-1 is the first generation of PII's which had the black cartridge covering both sides of the CPU, so the whole thing looked like a black rectangle. This was not as effective for cooling purposes, because it added an additional layer of metal between the heatsink and the CPU and cache chips. Later, Intel released the SECC-2 cartridge for PII's, which is also the housing for PIII's. The SECC-2 cartridge is kind of a hybrid between the fully clothed SECC-1 and the naked Celeron. The SECC-2 is covered on one side, and uncovered on the other. The reason for this was to allow cooling directly to the CPU, rather than having to deal with the metal plate that was on the SECC-1 cartridge. This is an SECC-1 PII:

    The SECC-2 Next!
Blog + Share: Digg Del.icio.us Reddit SU furl • More: AddThis Social Bookmark Button
Send This Article to a Friend!  
Table of Contents
  Print Entire Article  

MATRIX CONTENT » RANDOM MEDIA BLOG More Blogs >>
No ratings yet
» Please rate this
Read this Media-Blog entry!» The Nvidia "Crank That S#!T Up" Quiz Show! (21)
by mohawkade (35) Talk with this user on their Shout Box (My other blogs) Posted 21 months ago


 Latest Headlines
PC Game Sales for Friday, May 25th (0)
Double Fine's The Cave debuts with gameplay trailer (0)
New ARMA 3 trailer showcases lighting effects (0)
New PlanetSide 2 gameplay trailer, Massive Air Combat (1)
Mounted combat comes to Skyrim with beta update 1.6 (0)
Today's News >>
Today's Siteseeing >>


 Table of Contents


 Random Fact
Slot-1's official name now is "SC 242 connector", which stands for "242 contact slot connector".


FiringSquad is powered by... Back to Top Site MapContact UsAdvertise With Us Privacy StatementAbout Us  
News RSSSiteseeing RSSArticle RSS   © 1998-2012 FS Media, Inc. All Rights Reserved