• Updated 2023-07-12: Hello, Guest! Welcome back, and be sure to check out this follow-up post about our outage a week or so ago.

LCIII System Advice

equant

Well-known member
I've got an LCIII that has system 7.5.5 on it. The system is not a fresh install, but I've turned off most of the extensions. It has 36MB of memory. It seems pretty slow, and I was wondering if 7.1.1 would be faster. I don't have 7.6.

Any thoughts? Should I do a fresh install of 7.5?

Thanks,

equant

 

paws

Well-known member
It's not very fast with 7.5 nor 7.6, no.

A RAM disk helps, and you've got plenty of RAM, so...

 

MacMan

Well-known member
7.1 would indeed be faster. 7.5.5 is what I have used on LCIIIs in the past and I've been fairly happy with the performance, but I guess it depends what you are doing with the machine. RAM Doubler helps somewhat and makes things a bit quicker than using the System's Virtual Memory.

The LCIII is admittedly no speed demon!

 

equant

Well-known member
With 36MB of memory, I turned virtual memory off thinking it would make it faster. I'm not talking about CPU intensive stuff. It's slow opening a small text file with teach text. Maybe I should reinstall 7.5 fresh so I can see if it makes a difference.

 

LCGuy

LC Doctor/Hot Rodder
Just to check, are you running in 32 bit mode? Check your memory control panel. Also, turn off VM (if its turned on) - with 36MB of RAM, you don't need it, and all it does on 68ks is slow 'em down.

Try going through your system folder and cleaning out crap in there that you don't need. Also try defragging your HDD.

System 7.1 would likely be faster. You'll need System Enabler 003 though.

 

tomlee59

Well-known member
And certainly consider overclocking to 33MHz. It's a relatively quick and painless mod -- you don't even need to buy any new parts. I've not heard of an LCIII that didn't overclock to III+ status, so your chances of success are pretty good. That 1/3 boost in clock speed translates to much higher overall performance boosts because the overhead is already paid for. You will feel it.

 

paws

Well-known member
And certainly consider overclocking to 33MHz. It's a relatively quick and painless mod -- you don't even need to buy any new parts. I've not heard of an LCIII that didn't overclock to III+ status, so your chances of success are pretty good. That 1/3 boost in clock speed translates to much higher overall performance boosts because the overhead is already paid for. You will feel it.
How bad is that heatwise? I've taken the case fan out of mine, y'see..

 

tomlee59

Well-known member
Well, with the fan, there doesn't seem to be any problem with the overclocking. I have no data on how well it works without a fan, but if the heatsinking is reasonably good (I don't remember), it'll probably work ok. I've overclocked many a PB140 to 33MHz, and have never had a problem. Those have no fans, so that experience gives me some (foolish) encouragement. I invite you to try the experiment on a fanless LCIII, and report back!

 

Charlieman

Well-known member
In the old days, 7.5.x or 7.6.x would have been recommended on your LC III in order to support Netscape. But I don't think that we need to worry about that, today...

I'd go straight down to 7.1 before thinking about overclocking. Mess around with RamDisk settings and games, and I think that you'll find that performance is adequate.

 

paws

Well-known member
f the heatsinking is reasonably good (I don't remember), it'll probably work ok.
There's no heat sink of any kind in mine.

I've overclocked many a PB140 to 33MHz, and have never had a problem. Those have no fans, so that experience gives me some (foolish) encouragement. I invite you to try the experiment on a fanless LCIII, and report back!
That sounds interesting... but those have a heat sink, I imagine?

 

register

Well-known member
My LCIII came without a heatsink. I did overclock the machine to 33 MHz and its works well with help of the fan. I also put a math copro desoldered from a broken PB180 into the socket. The copro works fine, but after I noticed the processor housing melts during operation, I put a heatsink onto the copro. The machine is fine now :)

 

paws

Well-known member
How much of a speed increase is it, though? What annoys me most about it is screen redraws, really, as it's the most visible... Disk access, too, but then I tend to use a RAM disk to alleviate that.

 

Quadraman

Well-known member
I'm surprised an LC III would be considered so slow since it has the same CPU as a IIci and those were always raved over in terms of speed. The IIci doesn't have the legendary status of the IIfx, but it was always given it's due respect.

 

equant

Well-known member
I was surprised too, which is why I was thinking I might need to do a fresh install in order to see if it's really the machine.

 

dbraverman88

Well-known member
How does overclocking to 33 MHz compare to replacing the mother board with a Quadra 605 and putting in a 25MHZ 68040 (not the LC version)?

--David

 

LCGuy

LC Doctor/Hot Rodder
Personally I'd go the 605/475 board route, if I were you. Its much easier, requires no soldering, and will be faster, as well as allowing you to run 68040 only software. (such as Marathon Infinity, which doesn't run well on LCIII's, and OS 8, which has no 68030 support) Also, an LC475/Q605 board should be very easy to find.

 

paws

Well-known member
I'm surprised an LC III would be considered so slow since it has the same CPU as a IIci and those were always raved over in terms of speed. The IIci doesn't have the legendary status of the IIfx, but it was always given it's due respect.
There are other factors - memory speed and disk access speed, for instance. Also the speed of the graphics are very important to the perceived speed of an OS.

 
Top