My P4 3.06GHz 1.60ghz and appears in Windows XP! [device manager] [desktop pc]

Q: I have a with a P4 3.06 GHz, which is well recognized in the bios. When I right click on my computer-properties-u003e u003e general, the CPU appears as 3.06 GHz and below that 1.60ghz writes. In I have no problems, the CPU is well recognized as 3.06. Any help?


Best Answer: ibooks is made only for Apple devices like the iphone , ipad , ipod you can't access your ibooks account on any other device. There's no way it will work with Windows however it sounds like all you want is a pdf converter software try adobe it should work well for you.

Re:Maybe this question should be posed in General Hardware.

Re:Originally posted by: guy

Originally posted by: guy

Originally posted by: guy
In Power Options, what Power Scheme are you set at?

You have a mobile processor, which will automatically underclock itself under certain power schemes to conserve battery life. Since you're running on a desktop, you want to make sure you're running a power scheme that keeps the processor at full power.

How did you get a P4 mobile proc in a ?

Edit: Rephrased

Do the mobile processors use a different socket than the desktops? I know many people use mobile Athlon's in their desktop PCs.

I know the Mobile Athlons are the same socket, but I was under the impression that P4-M's used a different one. Guess I was wrong.


Re:Originally posted by: guy
Try the "Always On" setting. Otherwise, SpeedswitchXP (http://www.diefer.de/speedswitchxp/) will give you more granular control.

Incidentally, your processor should ramp up automatically as applications demand it. It might not be a bad idea to leave it as is. Your system will run cooler (and potentially quieter) if your system underclocks itself when it can.
This looks like a pretty neat app; I just might have to play with it on my laptop.

Thanks for the link.


Re:Originally posted by: guy

Originally posted by: guy
In Power Options, what Power Scheme are you set at?

You have a mobile processor, which will automatically underclock itself under certain power schemes to conserve battery life. Since you're running on a desktop, you want to make sure you're running a power scheme that keeps the processor at full power.

How did you get a P4 mobile proc in a ?

Edit: Rephrased

Do the mobile processors use a different socket than the desktops? I know many people use mobile Athlon's in their desktop PCs.


Re:Originally posted by: guy
In Power Options, what Power Scheme are you set at?

You have a mobile processor, which will automatically underclock itself under certain power schemes to conserve battery life. Since you're running on a desktop, you want to make sure you're running a power scheme that keeps the processor at full power.

How did you get a P4 mobile proc in a ?

Edit: Rephrased


Re:Try the "Always On" setting. Otherwise, SpeedswitchXP (http://www.diefer.de/speedswitchxp/) will give you more granular control.

Incidentally, your processor should ramp up automatically as applications demand it. It might not be a bad idea to leave it as is. Your system will run cooler (and potentially quieter) if your system underclocks itself when it can.


Re:In Power Schemes, it is set as Home/Office Desk.

Re:In Power Options, what Power Scheme are you set at?

You have a mobile processor, which will automatically underclock itself under certain power schemes to conserve battery life. Since you're running on a desktop, you want to make sure you're running a power scheme that keeps the processor at full power.


Re:run astra 4.21 from dos and this is what it found:

Intel Mobile Pentium 4-m 3.060ghz

In the bios at the beggining it shows this:
1.60ghz (133×12).

I have checked the cpu in 2 different motherboards with the latest bios


Re:Run CPU-Z and tell us what your FSB and multipliers and clock speed is in that.

-green


Re:I will post the complete details tomorrow as soon as i will use the pc.:)

Re:I think the stock fsb of those 3.06's is 533 (133×4) so it would have to be seriously underclocked to read @ 1.6.

Have you run a benchmark utility to see what your real speeds are? I've seen the computer properties dialog incorectly display CPU speeds in the past.
Here is an app that will give you a readout of the speed it's really running at:
http://www.geocities.com/izenkov/product-truespeed.htm


Re:what temp is your cpu running at?
if overheating the system will throttle down the speed to try to cool the cpu down.

Re:Some system specifications would be helpful. I'm torn over if this is a FSB issue or a new sort of SpeedStep utility.

Related posts

Leave a comment

0 Comments.

Leave a Reply


click to changeSecurity Code

[ Ctrl + Enter ]