Ah, a fellow squaddie looking for advise.
1. There is NO performance difference between the slot 1 and PPGA socket 370s worth speaking about.
2. Definately flash to the newest bios before upgrading.
3. The BX boards are VERY popular with overclockers, because they can actually run at 133 MHz FSB without too much trouble. The problem is that doing so runs the AGP bus at 89 Mhz, which is way above spec. Not all video cards can handle this. Personally I'd put in a 600E slot 1. They give you the best bang for the buck IMO. (They are also the easiest to overclock.) You will need to read up on your motherboard to see if it supports the Coppermine version of the PIII, if not you will be stuck with the older (still good though) Katami version. The difference lies in the cache setup and voltage requirements and the .18 process. Coppermines only take 1.05 Volts and have the cache on-die, just like the celerons. The older Katami used external cache ram chips runnning at 1/2 clock speed. If you find you can only accept this style of PIII, the fastest available is 600 Mhz I believe.
PC 100 memory is fine (in fact the fastest the BX chipset OFFICIALLY supports) as long as you buy a 100 Mhz FSB version of the PIII.
Using the slockets though, you should be aware that you CANNOT flash the bios with them installed. It just will not work. You will need to put back in the old PII or whatever came in your system to upgrade the bios. If this is impossible you can upgrade the bios through the recovery method I believe.
As for the power supply. 230 W SHOULD be ok, but it is pushing it. (Coppermine PIIIs use less power than the Katamis did actually.) To be same I would probably recommend picking up a 300W supply which should be no more than $60 US. If you plan on overclocking this is a good idea. Some extra fans are a good idea too, Katamis run pretty hot.
P.S. If you don't see me this weekend it's because I'm putting together a THUNDERBIRD 700 system (like the name
). You have a good enough board that I would recommend going with a PIII and living with it for a while longer. Athlon systems are very picky about power supplies, ram, and the like.
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bloom25
THUNDERBIRDS