[comp.sys.ibm.pc] Re^2: Can you speed up an old 6Mhz IBM-AT to 12Mhz?

snugroh@hubcap.clemson.edu (Anto) (07/09/90)

In comp.sys.ibm.pc you write:

>I even spent money on two different solutions.  The one I kept was from a company
>called Ariel, out of somewhere in NJ, I think.  

>Using their product, I unplugged the standard crystal and replaced it with a
>twist-dial unit that could run the system from 6 to about 12.5 Mhz.  My system
>always locked up at about 9.6 - 9.8 Mhz, but I couldn't tell why. 
......

Can you tell me what that twist-dial unit is and where I can get that ?.

Thanks alot.
-anto-

cak@vpnet.chi.il.us (Cindi Knox) (07/12/90)

I work in the PC repair business. If you run your AT at 10 or 12 MHz for
six months and THEN start having problems, don't send me the board and
tell me to ``FIX'' it so it works at the high speed again. I've seen
my share of 80286's that failed THERMALLY due to increased clock speed,
and also systems where the RAM or delay line for the RAM was too slow
for the ``new improved'' processing speed. Remember that all the components
in your computer work together , most at a speed determined by the crystal
you're changing. All you are doing is ``reving the engine higher'' without
changing the components that are designed to run slower. What happens when
you drive your car above the red line? That's what you're doing with your
computer, and while a safety margin is built in by most manufacturers, it
is not impossible to permanently damage components due to driving the
system too hard. 

Please, don't play garage computer engineer and expect a reliable system.
Weekend hot-rodders are continually fixing their cars. So are weekend
hot-clockers.


             I doubt any of these opinions are those of my employer.
                   I don't agree with ANYTHING they say.

Cindi Knox          | You've got a lot of living to do without life.
                    | 
cak@vpnet.chi.il.us | ``Little Miss S.'' by  Edie Brickell and New Bohemians.