1.0+ GHz comes finally to the Mac! Too bad you have to use a soldering
iron though, you void your warranty and offcourse it limits the Mac's
life...
But hey, I oc'ed my B&W 350 to 400 by adding a jumper and it's running
for over a year now w/o probs. So if you can afford frying your new G4,
why not?
Here's the story:


http://www.theregister.co.uk/content/39/20707.html
867MHz Power Mac G4 clocked to 1GHz+
By Tony Smith
Posted: 27/07/2001 at 15:00 GMT
A Japanese 867MHz Power Mac G4 owner claims to have souped his machine
up to 1.067GHz with a simple (ish) flip of a few resistors on the new
machine's motherboard.

On the underside of the Mac's processor daughtercard is a set of four
resistors marked R1, R3, R5 and R7, respectively. Connected to two of
them are circuit-making jumpers. According to the fellow's site,
unsoldering the jumpers and reapplying them to different resistors
changes the clock speed on the processor by adjusting the board's clock
multiplier.

Adjusting the jumpers provides for a range of clock speeds: 733MHz,
800MHz, 867MHz, 933MHz, 1.0GHz and 1.067GHz.

The guy reckons to have run his 867MHz at 1GHz and still maintain system
stability.

That said, there's a degree of diminishing returns here. For a 15 per
cent increase in clock speed, the fellow only got a benchmark
improvement of a fraction over 12 per cent. The PowerPC 7450 has its
limits and start pushing it up beyond the gigahertz barrier and its
efficiency starts to fall.

No surprise there - it's in the nature of microprocessor architectures
to have these restrictions. It's why the Pentium 4 isn't expected to
really come into its own until it hits 2GHz, for example.

It's also in the nature of processors that one part can run at various
speeds. Processor makers test each chip at all speeds and sell it at the
highest speed at which it will run completely without malfunction. The
Japanese G4 owner has clearly been lucky enough to get a processor that
is happy running at 1GHz - most other users are likely to be less
fortunate.

After all, if Apple could safely clock up the G4 to 1GHz, don't you
think it would be doing so? For all its talk of the 'Megahertz Myth'
Apple would love to offer a 1GHz machine as much as its customers would
like to buy one.

When Apple gets enough stable 1GHz parts, it'll release a machine at
that speed.

In the meantime, if you're a Quicksilver G4 owner, should you try for
1GHz? This site shows you how, but we'd urge you to leave well alone.
Soldering tiny resistors isn't a task for the inexperienced, and many
old hands would pass on it since it's so easy to fry your processor this
way. Go too far and in an instant your $2000 Mac is fritzed and by
tinkering with the internals you've voided the warranty. Only proceed if
you really don't mind rendering your Mac useless.

The site says: "Please note that any modifications you make to your
Macintosh are made at your own risk," and so do we. You have been
warned. �

overclocking the quicksilver
http://www.bekkoame.ne.jp/~t-imai/g4de1.html





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