CPU collecting

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DOSGuy
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CPU collecting

Post by DOSGuy »

Does anyone else collect CPUs? I now have 225 unique desktop CPUs (207 socket, 18 slot) and 7 variants. This list includes the Core i7 3770 in my current computer.

Desktop

Intel (128 unique, 7 variants)
DIP-18?10,000 nm8008 (500 KHz), 8008-1 (800 KHz)
DIP-40?3000 nm8085AH-2 (5 MHz)
?8086 (5 MHz), 8086-2 (8 MHz)
?8088 (5 MHz), 8088-2 (8 MHz)
286 socket?1500 nm80286 10
386 socket?1500 nm80386 16, 20
1000 nm80386 DX 25, 33
486 socketP41000 nm80486 DX 33
P231000 nm80486 SX 25, 33
P24600 nm?80486 DX2 50, 66
P4T600 nm486 OverDrive ODPR486DX-33, DX2ODPR66, DX4ODPR100
Socket 3P24C600 nm?80486 DX4 100
Socket 4P5800 nmPentium 60, 66
Socket 5P54C600 nmPentium 75, 90 (ceramic and metal cap), 100
P54CQS350 nmPentium 120 (iComp 1 and 2)
P54CS350 nmPentium 133 (iComp 1 and 2), 150, 166 (ceramic and plastic)
Socket 7P55C280 nmPentium MMX 166 (ceramic and plastic), 200 (ceramic and plastic), 233 (w/ and w/o heatsink and fan)
Slot 1Klamath350 nmPentium II 233, 266, 300
Deschutes250 nmPentium II 300, 333, 350, 400
Mendocino250 nmCeleron 300A, 333, 366
Katmai250 nmPentium III 450, 500, 550
Coppermine180 nmPentium III 667, 800EB, 850, 866
Socket 370Coppermine180 nmPentium III 550E, 650, 700, 733, 800, 800EB, 866, 933, 1000, 1000EB
Tualatin130 nmPentium III 1133S, 1400S
Mendocino250 nmCeleron 366, 400, 433, 466, 500, 533
Coppermine-128180 nmCeleron 600, 667, 700, 766, 800, 850, 950, 1000
Tualatin-256130 nmCeleron 1000A, 1200
Socket 423Williamette180 nmPentium 4 1.3, 1.4, 1.5, 1.7
Socket 478Williamette180 nmPentium 4 1.4, 1.5, 1.7, 1.8
Northwood130 nmPentium 4 1.6A, 1.8A, 2.0A, 2.4, 2.4B, 2.53, 2.66
Pentium 4 HT 2.8C, 3.0
Prescott90 nmPentium 4 2.40A
Pentium 4 HT 3.0E
Northwood-128130 nmCeleron 2.2, 2.4, 2.5, 2.6
Prescott-25690 nmCeleron D 315, 320, 325, 335, 340
LGA 775Prescott90 nmPentium 4 HT 524, 530, 530J
Prescott 2M90 nmPentium 4 HT 630
Cedar Mill65 nmPentium 4 HT 641
Smithfield90 nmPentium D 805, 820
Presler65 nmPentium D 915, 930
Cedar Mill-51265 nmCeleron D 356, 360
Conroe (800)65 nmCore 2 Duo E4500
Conroe (1066)65 nmCore 2 Duo E6600
Conroe (1333)65 nmCore 2 Duo E6550
Allendale65 nmCeleron Dual-Core E1400
Pentium Dual-Core E2180, E2200
Kentsfield65 nmCore 2 Quad Q6600
Wolfdale-3M45 nmPentium E5700
LGA 1155Ivy Bridge22 nmCore i7 3770
AMD (76)
DIP-40?3000 nmP8086-1
386 socket?1000 nm?Am386 DX 33
486 socket?? nmAm486 DX 33, 40, DX2 66
?? nmAm486 SX2 66
Socket 3?? nmAm4x86 DX2 80 (8T), DX4 100 (8T), DX4 100 (8B)
X5350 nmAm5x86 P75
Socket 5SSA/5500 or 350 nmK5 PR90, PR100
5k86350 nmK5 PR120, PR133, PR166
Socket 7K6350 nmK6 166, 200, 233
Super Socket 7Little Foot250 nmK6 266, 300
Chomper250 nmK6-2 266 (printed and etched), 300, 333
Chomper XT250 nmK6-2 350, 400, 450
Slot AOrion180 nmAthlon 950
Socket 462Thunderbird180 nmAthlon 750, 800, 850, 900, 1000B, 1000C, 1200C, 1266, 1333, 1400C
Palomino180 nmAthlon XP 1600+, 1700+, 1800+, 1900+, 2000+
Thoroughbred130 nmAthlon XP 1700+, 1800+, 2000+, 2200+, 2400+, 2600+ (C), 2600+ (D)
Barton130 nmAthlon XP 2500+ (D), 2600+ (D)
Spitfire180 nmDuron 600, 650, 700, 750, 800, 900
Morgan180 nmDuron 1000, 1100, 1200, 1300
Applebred130 nmDuron 1400, 1600, 1800
Thoroughbred-B130 nmSempron 2200+, 2500+, 2600+, 2800+
Socket 754Newcastle130 nmAthlon 64 2800+
Palermo90 nmSempron 2800+, 3000+, 3100+
Socket 939Venice90 nmAthlon 64 3200+
San Diego90 nmAthlon 64 3700+
Palermo90 nmSempron 3200+
Socket AM2Brisbane65 nmAthlon X2 4850e
Kingston Technology (1)
Socket 3TurboChip 133
Cyrix/Via (11)
486 socket??Cx486 DX2 80, DX4 100
Socket 3M1sc?5x86 100GP
Socket 7M1R650 nm6x86 P150+, P166+
M1L350 nm6x86L P166+, 200+
MII350 nm6x86MX PR200 (75x2), MX PR233
300 nm6x86MX PR200 (66x2.5)
350/300 nmMII 300
Socket 370Samuel 2150 nm1GigaPro (Via C3 650 MHz)
IBM (7)
Socket 7M1R650 nm6x86 P150+
M1L350 nm6x86L PR166+, PR200+
MII350/300 nm6x86MX PR166, PR200, PR233
250 nm6x86MX PR300 (66x3.5)
SGS-Thomson (1)
Socket 7M1650 nm6x86 P166+
IDT (1)
Socket 5WinChip 2A 233
Additionally, I have a few server and mobile processors, and math co-processors.

Server processors
Socket 8P6350 nmPentium Pro 200 256K
Slot 2Drake250 nmPentium II Xeon 450
Socket 604Nocona90 nmXeon 3.0D
x87 Math Co-processors
DIP-4080287-6, 80287-8, 80287-10
38780387-16B, 80387-20, 80387DX 16-33
Last edited by DOSGuy on September 1st, 2023, 2:22 am, edited 76 times in total.
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Malvineous
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Re: CPU collecting

Post by Malvineous »

The real question is whether you have the motherboards and memory to turn them into working PCs :-)

I can't say I collect them, but I have a fair few Slot 1 CPUs and everything needed to turn them into working DOS machines (down to network and SoundBlaster cards), if only I had the space to set them up...

I actually pulled apart an old server last weekend and took the four CPUs out of it, only to realise later they were Slot 2 (PII Xeon) so I don't have a motherboard for them (junked the rest of the server, all the parts were custom and couldn't be reused in a standard PC.) But it looks like that's one of the few variants missing from your quite extensive collection!
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leilei
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Re: CPU collecting

Post by leilei »

I don't collect, but I "hang onto them".

I have mostly Socket 7 and Slot 1. I have a few Socket 3's as well
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Re: CPU collecting

Post by DOSGuy »

Malvineous wrote:The real question is whether you have the motherboards and memory to turn them into working PCs :-)
I have 30-pin, 72-pin, SDRAM, RDRAM, DDR1, DDR2, and DDR3 RAM.
I have ISA, VLB, PCI, AGP and PCI-E graphics cards.
I have ISA and PCI sound cards.
I have AT and ATX power supplies.
I don't have a Socket 4 motherboard, but I have dang near everything else. I have:

Intel:
8088 motherboard (in my original IBM PC)
286 QFP socket
386 socket
386 & 486 socket
486 socket
Socket 2
Socket 3
Dual Socket 5
Socket 7
Dual Socket 8
Slot 1
Socket 370
Socket 423
Socket 478
Socket 775
Socket 1155

AMD:
Super Socket 7
Socket 462
Socket 754
Socket 939
Socket AM2

So I can make a working computer using almost every CPU I have.
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Re: CPU collecting

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Had a good haul today at Computer Care Centre in Ottawa. I picked up a Pentium III 800 (Socket 370), Pentium 4 1.8A, Am486 DX4 100, Athlon 1000, Athlon XP 2000+, IBM 6x86 P150+, IBM 6x86 L PR200+, Kingston TurboChip, a Socket 3 motherboard populated with an Am486 DX 40 (already had one) and eight sticks of 30-pin RAM, a Socket 423 motherboard with Pentium 4 1.5 and 2x256 MB RDRAM, a Socket 754 motherboard, a Socket AM2 motherboard, a Sound Blaster Audigy 2, a Diamond Speedstar Pro VLB, and a 30-pin to 72-pin RAM adapter populated with four 30-pin SIMMs. I don't plan to collect them, but I also picked up a Celeron M 370 (1.5 GHz, Socket 479).

So basically, 11 CPUs, 4 motherboards, 2 sets of RAM, a sound card, a graphics card, and a RAM adapter for $105.99. I lost track of the price when he went through it all, but the idea was that everything was $5 except for the Pentium 4 1.8A, which was $10 because it had been tested, and I'm not sure where the $0.99 came from. I got my first Socket 754 motherboard, my first Socket AM2 motherboard, my first Socket 423 motherboard and CPU, my first set of RDRAM, and my first mobile CPU. Unfortunately I also ran out of money and had to borrow $25 to complete the sale, so I'm broke until Wednesday. Ah well, it was still fun a birthday present to myself. I only go to CCC about once a year.
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Malvineous
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Re: CPU collecting

Post by Malvineous »

Wow, quite a haul! I didn't know you could adapt 30-pin RAM to 72-pin slots!
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Re: CPU collecting

Post by DOSGuy »

It's pretty cool, actually. It's a riser card with four 30-pin SIMM slots. I've seen motherboards that took two types of RAM (30/72 and 72/168), but I've never seen a card that lets you put one type of RAM in the slot for another type. 30 and 72-pin RAM are both asynchronous, so I think the major difference between the two RAM types is the number of SIMMs to a bank, which the adapter satisfies by putting four 30-pin SIMMs in one 72-pin package.
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Re: CPU collecting

Post by Malvineous »

Interesting. I've seen 72-pin EDO RAM, as well as 168-pin EDO RAM (as opposed to 168-pin SDRAM) so it might be possible to do the same again. Heh, it would be quite a sight to see a Pentium II running with a mass of 30-pin sticks of memory through various adapters...
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Re: CPU collecting

Post by DOSGuy »

Had another good haul today. A fellow on Kijiji was selling a lot of six motherboards that he wasn't willing to break up, and he threw in eight loose CPUs when he found out that I was a collector.

CUV4X Socket 370 motherboard w/ Pentium III 1000 (133)
Asus P4BPE2-X Socket 478 motherboard
Asus P4B266-C Socket 478 motherboard w/ Pentium 4 1.7
Asus P4B533 Socket 478 motherboard w/ Pentium 4 2.53
Asus P4B800-X Socket 478 motherboard w/ Pentium 4 2.80
Abit KT7A-RAID Socket 462 motherboard w/ Athlon 1333
Loose CPUs: Am486 DX2-66, Am486 DX4-100, Athlon 900, Pentium 75, Pentium 100, Pentium III 650, Pentium III 733, Celeron 1000

So, despite a few doubles, I picked up 13 CPUs and 6 motherboards for $30. People can be quite generous when they find out how much care I put into my collection. I got my first Socket 370 motherboard and six new CPUs. :)

I tried to get the CUV4X running with AGP 1x, AGP 2x and PCI graphics cards, but I couldn't get any video from any of them. Then I grabbed a 1992 Trident SVGA graphics card with 1MB DRAM and put it in the ISA slot and everything was happy. I successfully used the board to test all of my SDRAM.
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Malvineous
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Re: CPU collecting

Post by Malvineous »

Nice! I have just recently gotten hold of a CompactFlash card and an IDE adapter so I can set up a couple of my old motherboards as DOS machines without having to worry about old hard drives for them. (I did have them booting over the network as diskless PCs in the past but unfortunately many real-mode games had issues with the amount of conventional memory used up by the network driver.)

Did you see the CPU database mentioned on Slashdot recently? That'll give you a long list to work your way through collecting ;-)
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Re: CPU collecting

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I picked up 29 CPUs for $150 last weekend from a computer store in my home town. I usually pay no more than $5 per CPU, and expect a considerable bulk discount for a lot this large, but a large number of the CPUs were newer, so it seemed worth it. There was one Socket 7, three Socket 370, one Socket 423, eight Socket 478, nine Socket 462, three Socket 754, three Socket 939, and one Socket AM2 CPU. The AM2 CPU was a complete accident; I didn't notice the 940th pin and thought it was Socket 939.
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Re: CPU collecting

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I had an ad listed online looking for people to trade my duplicate CPUs with, and a fellow answered that he had some unusual CPUs that he would be willing to trade for non-CPU parts. We agreed to
trade his "8087, 8087-3, 8088, 80387SX, PIII 600 slot, PIII 900 slot, Celeron 533 socket, Celeron 566 socket, PIII 600 socket, Celeron D 2.5GHz, P4 3.06 GHz, Athlon 900" for two sticks of 512 MB PC3200 and 200 GB PATA hard drive.

By the time the exchange took place, I was unable to find my 200 GB PATA hard drive and offered a 160 GB instead, and he revealed the the P3 900 slot CPU was actually a P3 800. The 8087 turned out to be an 8087-2, and the Athlon 900 turned out to be an Athlon XP 2600+. He decided to keep the P4 3.06 and asked me if I could find a motherboard for it, which I intend to do. Here's where it gets interesting.

He had dozens of CPUs in his car, which he offered me if I was interested. There were Pentiums, Pentium IIIs and Celerons, but instead of the familiar "SLxxx" and "SYxxx" sSpec numbers, they had codes starting with Q. Almost all of the chips he had brought had "ES" written on them. I'm used to seeing that acronym on photos from review sites. ES = Engineering Sample! Sure enough, a few of the chips also said "Confidential" after the copyright date. He told me that most of the CPUs were engineering samples, and where I asked where he had gotten them, he said that he used to work for Intel!

Below is a list of the engineering samples he gave me.
40-pin DIP?C8087-2 (ES)
C8087-3 (ES)
Socket 5P54CPentium "60-90" (Q0542) Confidential
P54CQSPentium "60-120" (Q0732) Confidential
P54CSPentium "66-133" (Q0772) x2
Pentium "66-133" (Q0773) Confidential
Pentium 166 SY016 (no "ES", but blank line where iComp 2 rating should be)
Pentium 200 (Q0951F ES)
Socket 7P55CPentium 166 MMX (Q019 ES)
Pentium 200 MMX (Q124 ES)
Socket 8P6Pentium Pro 200 256K ("ES" on the bottom)
Slot 1KatmaiIntel Confidential (Q818ES) 80525PY500512 = Pentium III 500
Intel Confidential (QD62ES) 80525PY600512 = Pentium III 600
CoppermineIntel Confidential (QT97ES) 80526PY800256 = Pentium III 800
Socket 370CopperminePentium III 600E (QF13ES)
Pentium III 733 (QS21ES)
MendocinoCeleron 366 (Q921ES)
Celeron 466 (QB11ES) x6
Celeron 500 (QD27ES) x2
Celeron 533 (QG11ES)
Coppermine-128Celeron 566 (QR02ES) x2
Socket 478Prescott-256Intel Confidential (Q611 ES) 80546RE072256 = Celeron D 335 @ 2800 MHz
The 8087-2 and 8087-3 have "(ES)" on them, while all of the other CPUs have "ES" (without brackets) somewhere on them, usually after the Qxxx number. The Pentium Pro 200 only has "ES" written on the bottom after "MALAY", and the Pentium 166 doesn't say "ES" anywhere on it, but there's a blank line where the iComp 2 rating should be, so I think it's an engineering sample. The oddest one was the CPU that he told me would be a Celeron D 2.5. Instead of "Celeron", it just says "Intel Confidential". Like all of the other CPUs, it still has the normal part number, which allowed me to identify it as a Celeron D 335 running at 2800 MHz. Both of the Slot 1 CPUs just said "Intel Confidential", but at least the clock speed was easy to identify in the part number. In total, he gave me 28 engineering samples. Some of the CPUs came in plastic cases with anti-static foam. One says "intel" "Peripherals" "Sample Kit" on it, and another says "Genuine Intel 32-bit microprocessor inside" "Delivered with pride from the Silicon Forest Especially for You" "Workgroup Computing Division - Portland".

In addition to the engineering samples, he also gave me 4 non-engineering samples: the 8088, 80387SX-20 and "Barton" Athlon XP 2600+ (1917 MHz) as we agreed, and he threw in a "Banias" Pentium M 1.3. So 32 CPUs in all, all but one of them rare or unusual (if you consider a mobile CPU unusual). Not bad for two sticks of RAM, a hard drive, a future motherboard, and anything else he ever wants in the future!
Last edited by DOSGuy on April 1st, 2013, 1:50 pm, edited 3 times in total.
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Re: CPU collecting

Post by MrFlibble »

DOSGuy wrote:He told me that most of the CPUs were engineering samples, and where I asked where he had gotten them, he said that he used to work for Intel!
This is certainly very cool, nice to hear you've met such a guy, with your interest in collecting hardware parts :D
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Re: CPU collecting

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For those of you who were into CPUs in the mid-1990s, you may remember the OverDrive processors. Intel sold 486, Pentium and Pentium II OverDrive processors as upgrades for older CPUs.

486 OverDrive processors used a write-back cache instead of the write-through cache of normal 486s, and came in two varieties: ODPR for normal 168 pin 486 sockets, and ODP 169 pin versions that required a Socket 1/2/3 ZIF socket. There were DX2 50, DX2 66, DX4 75 and DX4 100 models of both types. My former high school allowed me to remove and keep twelve DX2ODPR66 486 OverDrive processors from computers they were throwing out many years ago.

Pentium OverDrive processors were available for 486 sockets, which basically gave you a Pentium that ran at either 63 (25 x 2.5) or 83 (33 x 2.5) MHz. There was a Pentium OverDrive for the original Socket 4 motherboards that had a clock multiplier of 2, allowing users of the obsolete Pentium 60 and 66 CPUs to upgrade to 120/133 MHz. There were also Pentium OverDrive processors for the more common Socket 5/7 motherboards running at 125 (50 x 2.5), 150 (60 x 2.5) and 166 (66 x 2.5) MHz, and MMX versions running at 150 (60 x 2.5), 166 (66 x 2.5), 180 (60 x 3) and 200 (66 x 3) MHz. I'm not sure how they improved performance versus non-OverDrive Pentiums, but the most likely answer is that they used write-back cache instead of write-through.

Finally, there was a Pentium II OverDrive for Socket 8 to upgrade Pentium Pro computers. Whereas the Pentium Pro had topped out at 200 MHz, the Pentium II OverDrive used a 5x multiplier to run at 300/333 MHz, and added support for MMX instructions which had been missing from the Pentium Pro. It only came with 512 KB of L2 cache, but I'd wager that a 333 MHz Pentium II with 512 KB of L2 cache would whup a 200 MHz Pentium Pro with 1 MB of L2 cache, even in applications that didn't support MMX.


I mention all of this because, while cleaning, I found a boxed Intel Pentium OverDrive PODP5V83! That's the one that turns a 486 into a Pentium 83, and might be the most powerful CPU to ever run in a 486 socket! I'm pretty sure that I bought it at a garage sale, but I had never opened the (previously opened) box. It has a Compucentre price tag, covered by another price tag for $399.00, which is partially covered by a "SPECIAL" price tag reducing the price to $299.99. I was really thrilled to rediscover this item, and I decided to remove the CPU and add it to my collection. Inside I found a CPU with a heat sink already attached, and there was no writing on the bottom of the CPU. The heat sink slid off quite easily, being held in place only by thermal paste. Upon removing the heat sink, I could make "AMD" and "X2-66". It was a freaking Am486 DX2-66!

I was crushed. The presumably super rare CPU that I had paid for was an ultra-common Am486 DX2-66. It would get added to the pile of duplicate AMD 486s that I already can't rid of on Craigslist, Kijiji and UsedEverywhere. I then cleaned off the thermal paste and... WTF? It was an Am486 SX2-66! Are you kidding me? I've never even seen an SX2 processor before, even from Intel! I even questioned their existence until I found photos of them online.

So, it was not the rare CPU that I thought it was, but at least it was another rare CPU. I don't know which one is harder to find, but either one is better than a freaking DX2 66. What a weird morning.
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leilei
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Re: CPU collecting

Post by leilei »

I thought the Cyrix5x86-133 was the most powerful CPU available for Socket3?
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