Munx wrote:LX is a very good and stable chipset limited by a slow 66Mhz FSB. Apollo has support for 133FSB and some other nice stuff, but from what Ive read there are issues with the AGP bus in certain motherboards. Only Apollo Pro 133A has official support for 133MHz FSB. Apollo Pro only supports 100MHz, but still beats LX's 66MHz.
VIA Technologies, Inc is a global leader in the development of highly-integrated platform and system solutions for M2M, IoT, & Smart City applications. Jan 29, 2018 - 0 Comments. Via Vt82c693a Apollo Pro 133 Driver Download. VIA VX Series Media System Processors, (MSP) optimized with VIA integrated.
All Apollo Pro 133 chipsets have 133MHz FSB support. OP's board is a regular VT82C691, so it's the non-133 version. The regular Apollo pro 133 is VT82C693A, and the 133A version is VT82C694X - the difference between the two is AGP 4X support, witch the 133A has and the 133 non A does not. The 133A also supports up to 2GB of ram as opposed to 1.5GB for the non-A version. The VT82C694T has official tualatin support (Pro 133T).
There are Apollo PRO VT82C691 boards that can handle FSB 133, and have options in BIOS for it - including a divider to run PCI at 33MHz and AGP at 66MHz. Oldbie Posts: 1957 Joined: 2015-4-22 @ 20:30 Location: Bucharest, Romania. Munx wrote:LX is a very good and stable chipset limited by a slow 66Mhz FSB. Apollo has support for 133FSB and some other nice stuff, but from what Ive read there are issues with the AGP bus in certain motherboards. Only Apollo Pro 133A has official support for 133MHz FSB. Apollo Pro only supports 100MHz, but still beats LX's 66MHz.
You are mixing up VIA chipsets. Its the Socket A KT133 that only supports 100Mhz FSB with the KT133A being required for 133Mhz FSB.
Member Posts: 338 Joined: 2016-10-07 @ 23:21. Koltoroc wrote:Considering the KT133 is officially only specified for 100Mhz FSB, any 133Mhz 'support' is overclocking the chipset.
In my experience Kt133 stability gets REALLY iffy once you go past 115Mhz, if it even gets that high. But when has questionable stability and compatibility ever stopped any budget board maker? Precisely I do have a KT133 acorp board witch can do 133MHz right.
You jumper it for 133 (it has a JP19 - open = 100MHz closed = 133MHz), and it will post at 133MHz with PCI Clock = 1:1/4 and AGP clock = 1:1/2 witch I find a bit wierd for something designed with 100MHz fsb in mind. The earliest KT133 board I have has jumpers for AGP and PCI clocks like a super socket 7 board.
Oldbie Posts: 1957 Joined: 2015-4-22 @ 20:30 Location: Bucharest, Romania. Kanecvr wrote: Nope.
All Apollo Pro 133 chipsets have 133MHz FSB support. OP's board is a regular VT82C691, so it's the non-133 version.
The regular Apollo pro 133 is VT82C693A, and the 133A version is VT82C694X - the difference between the two is AGP 4X support, witch the 133A has and the 133 non A does not. The 133A also supports up to 2GB of ram as opposed to 1.5GB for the non-A version.
The VT82C694T has official tualatin support (Pro 133T). There are Apollo PRO VT82C691 boards that can handle FSB 133, and have options in BIOS for it - including a divider to run PCI at 33MHz and AGP at 66MHz. It's a shame on me. I had owned a pro133 board around year 2000. Oldbie Posts: 1064 Joined: 2014-10-21 @ 21:16. Kanecvr wrote: Nope. All Apollo Pro 133 chipsets have 133MHz FSB support.
OP's board is a regular VT82C691, so it's the non-133 version. The regular Apollo pro 133 is VT82C693A, and the 133A version is VT82C694X - the difference between the two is AGP 4X support, witch the 133A has and the 133 non A does not. The 133A also supports up to 2GB of ram as opposed to 1.5GB for the non-A version.
2) Click the 'Start Upload' button to start uploading the file. You will see the progress of the file transfer. You can then select photos, audio, video, documents or anything else you want to send. The maximum file size is 500 MB. 1) Select a file to send by clicking the 'Browse' button.
The VT82C694T has official tualatin support (Pro 133T). There are Apollo PRO VT82C691 boards that can handle FSB 133, and have options in BIOS for it - including a divider to run PCI at 33MHz and AGP at 66MHz. It's a shame on me. I had owned a pro133 board around year 2000.
That's a long time ago. I forgot most of this stuff myself - thank good for datasheets. Oldbie Posts: 1957 Joined: 2015-4-22 @ 20:30 Location: Bucharest, Romania. Appiah4 wrote:I'm considering building a Celeron Socket 370 system, and I have two boards I can use for this.