lane@cs.dal.ca (John Wright/Dr. Pat Lane) (03/06/90)
I had hear that 80*87 chips tend to run hot but I didn't realize how hot until I installed one in my 286 clone. It nearly burnt my finger to touch it. Concerned, I called Intel's tech support line (1-800-538-3373 if you're interested - one of the better one's I've tried) and the fellow I talked to said "yep, you can fry eggs on them...if you can hold you finger on one for more than 2 seconds either the chip is dead or the nerves in your finger are". He went on to say that the chip is carefully designed with a ceramic case so as to withstand this heat and last at least the 5 years for which the thing is warranteed. I asked him about putting a heat sink on the chip and he recommended against it, especially gluing one on with epoxy, since this might disrupt the chips own heat dissapation ability and make things worse. Now this might be a conservative, "if-it-isn't-in-the-book-don't-do-it" response. What do the engineering-types here on the net think? Anyone have any experience in this area? BTW, one area of confusion with co-processors is getting the right speed. What I've always heard is that with *most* 8086, 8088, and 80386 mother- boards you use the same speed co-processor as the maximum speed of the CPU. Most (but not all) '286 boards run the co-processor at 2/3 the CPU speed. One is supposed to check with the manufacturer to find out for sure which co-processor to use. I have no idea who the manufacturer of mine is - it's a clone and there's no name on the motherboard! Mine is a 6/10MHz switchable '286 so assuming the 2/3 rule, my co-processor should run at 4 or 6.67 MHz. It's an 80287-8 so I should be OK. To check the 2/3 assumption, I ran a pgm from the PC Tech Journal called ATPERF (I got it from SIMTEL) which tests things like apparent CPU and co-processor clock rates, wait states, refresh overhead, etc. by doing a series of timing tests (the co-processor rate is determined by timing a floating point divide). Running it with the co-processor installed, I got the co-processor speeds I was expecting so I guess I'm OK there... -- John Wright ////////////////// Phone: 902-424-3805 or 902-424-6527 Post: c/o Dr Pat Lane, Biology Dept, Dalhousie U, Halifax N.S., CANADA B3H-4H8 Cdn/Eannet:lane@cs.dal.cdn Uucp:lane@dalcs.uucp or {uunet watmath}!dalcs!lane Arpa:lane%dalcs.uucp@uunet.uu.net Internet:lane@cs.dal.ca