I was able to upgrade my Daystar Turbo 601 (PowerPC 601 upgrade for the IIci) from 66MHz to 100MHz!
I followed this guide: http://www.applefool.com/clockchipping/dt601.html.
HOWEVER! I made a few changes...
The above guide overclocks the original PPC601 CPU and does not replace it with a faster one. The PPC601 was never meant to go beyond 80MHz, so overclocking won't get you very far.
Instead, I bought a NOS 601v off of eBay rated for 110MHz. The 601v was made in speeds up to 120MHz, so perhaps a 120MHz mod is possible. Theoretically, you could also salvage a 601v from a donor Mac, but desoldering 601's is usually pretty tricky. Unlike the 601 though, the 601v needs a 2.5v core voltage compared to the 601's 3.6v.
I followed the original guide step-by-step, but also desoldered the original 601 CPU and replaced it with the 601v using a hot air station.
Because of this, you need to add one additional step. You must move R14 (107 ohms) to R15 (originally 200 ohms), and place a 90.9 ohm resistor in R14. This will make the regulator output 2.7v instead of 3.6. I didn't have a 90.9 ohm resistor, so I opted to put 100 ohm resistors on both R14 and R15, which should have the regulator output 2.5v.
I followed this guide: http://www.applefool.com/clockchipping/dt601.html.
HOWEVER! I made a few changes...
The above guide overclocks the original PPC601 CPU and does not replace it with a faster one. The PPC601 was never meant to go beyond 80MHz, so overclocking won't get you very far.
Instead, I bought a NOS 601v off of eBay rated for 110MHz. The 601v was made in speeds up to 120MHz, so perhaps a 120MHz mod is possible. Theoretically, you could also salvage a 601v from a donor Mac, but desoldering 601's is usually pretty tricky. Unlike the 601 though, the 601v needs a 2.5v core voltage compared to the 601's 3.6v.
I followed the original guide step-by-step, but also desoldered the original 601 CPU and replaced it with the 601v using a hot air station.
Because of this, you need to add one additional step. You must move R14 (107 ohms) to R15 (originally 200 ohms), and place a 90.9 ohm resistor in R14. This will make the regulator output 2.7v instead of 3.6. I didn't have a 90.9 ohm resistor, so I opted to put 100 ohm resistors on both R14 and R15, which should have the regulator output 2.5v.

