'Registered post' means different things in different countries. For me it means that a card arrives in my letter box telling me that something 'registered' (ie, listed and tracked with a number beginning with 'R', and automatically insured) awaits me at the local PO, to which I then have to haul myself and sign for the article. It may be completely different where you are.okay, dumb question time again-If it says it will arrive via "register airmail", does that mean I should check my PO box, or wait for UPS/FedEx/DHL to come to my door?
The lower-octane PPC7410 is employed in the PowerForce, in order to reduce heat and power consumption. The 7410 will run at 533MHz on the Beige's 66MHz bus, while the 100MHz B&Ws let the CPU run to 550MHz.
"The card scores very favorably against models like the PowerMac G4-733 / " said Robin Howdershelt, Marketing Director for PowerLogix. "/ hits 1581 on the MacBench CPU scores and blows the doors off the 733MHz Apple machine with an FPU score of 1520 (vs. 1424 on the 733)."
and this:set at 6 and it booted up at 550 Mhz, when i set it at 7 it did not boot, and when i set it at 5 it booted at 650./Ive got a copper bottom, hand lapped pentium heatsink with a fan on it. Got the G4 CPU in it running cool now at 650Mhz. Made my own chart.
See ya.
For B/W G3: 6=550, 2=500for Beige G3: 7=500, C=533
I am sorry but that is a discontinued product produced by an earlier Powerlogix group. The settings are not available any longer.
I have a 500MHz G4 that is just like that. I just kept turning the dial until the system profiler reported a speed of 500MHz. It's running in my 8500 with a ZIF Carrier card. Took me about 6 reboots before I got it, but its working, is stable and is very fast.a trim dial with numbers around it, presumably something to do with speed setting. / It looks precisely like this (Warning: large image)
Thermal paste is always, both notionally and in practice, better than thermal pads. The function of the paste is to displace the air in the minute crevices, craters and valleys of the machined metal surfaces of CPU and heatsink, and to provide 20+ times better heat conductivity than air can. Even water can do a good job, but heated water doesn't hang about for as long as good-quality thermal paste. Thermal pads, not being metallic throughout, and much thicker than a smear of paste, sacrifice conductivity for plug'n'play convenience.You're better off using thermal paste than a transfer pad. Arctic Silver is the supposed best, but there are others. You only need a tiny smear of it on the CPU.