On Mon, 21 Aug 2006 20:00:08 -0500,
rebuildapc@lovethepc.org
wrote:
>Thanks for the answers to the previous message - now maybe you can help me
>with another simple question (for you!). LOL
>
>I have an old SE440bx mobo. From what I understand, these old mobo's are
>among the best Intel has ever made.
Pretty good build quality yes, but a few important
limitations:
- Needs newer bios for large HDD support. Did it get past
48bit LBA (128GB limit)? Maybe, or maybe it needs a bios
just to support UP to 128GB.
- AGP 2X only, today it becomes a bottleneck for gaming,
though I wouldn't buy a video card that fast for that system
either
- USB1.1, significant sluggishness on many of today's
peripherals
- ATA33, still usable with a modern HDD, but noticably
slower
- Max memory 1GB? Usually only 512MB, after which point
you have to go to registered memory... and only low-density
memory support, max of 256MB per slot.
>Even though the Intel specs state it
>takes 3x128 mg of sdram, it's well known in the forums across the net that
>it handles 3x256 mg sdram 168 pin DIMM (pc100 or pc133) quite nicely.
According to intel you're not supposed to populate 3 x 256MB
unless registered memory. It may work for some, but not
guaranteed.
>
>It currently is using ECC ram as it was originally used for heavy financial
>work. Am I correct in assuming I can use non-ECC ram as long as ALL slots
>contain non-ECC sticks?
Yes, but frankly since you already have ECC, I'd buy one
256MB of ECC and add to what you already have. Having a ton
of memory on a box bottlenecked by HDD, CPU, video, USB, is
a bit of a mismatch. Perhaps a good plan for a fileserver
to max out memory.