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Processor Family |
Model Name |
Intel Celeron Mendocino |
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Performance Rating |
433 MHz |
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Front-side Bus Speed |
66 MHz |
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Multiplier Ratio |
6.5× |
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Physical Design |
Interface Packing |
242-Pin Slot 1 Cartridge |
370-Pin PPGA Socket |
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Core Voltage |
2.0 volts |
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Power Consumption |
16 watts |
|
Maximum Power |
24.6 watts |
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Celeron Mendocino |
Model Rating |
433 MHz |
---|---|---|
|
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Overclocking Potential |
Multiplier Lock Support |
Locked Multiplier |
Typical Multiplier O/C |
N/A |
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Typical Front-side Bus O/C |
Up to 83 MHz |
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Typical O/C Potential |
488 – 540 MHz |
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Maximum O/C Potential |
550 – 600 MHz |
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Overclocking Tolerances |
Recommended Cooling Type |
Forced-Air Heatsink |
Recommended Heatsink Coolers |
Globalwin VEK 16 |
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Vantec PIID-4535H |
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Thermalright SK6 |
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Globalwin CAK-38 |
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Recommended Peltier Active Cooler |
STEP-UP-53X2 |
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Maximum Core Voltage |
2.2 volts with Heatsink Cooler |
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Maximum I/O Voltage |
3.5 volts with Chipset Cooler |
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Maximum Core Temperature |
85° Celsius |
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The Celeron 433A allows little headroom for successful scaling beyond 540 MHz. Its 6.5× core multiplier will limit successful overclocks near 500 MHz with traditional heatsink cooling. Considering the lack of effective frequency scaling, the retail Intel heatsink should prove more than adequate for overclocking at speeds approaching 500 MHz. Otherwise, the Celeron 433A offers only moderate overclocking returns, because the 100-MHz front-side bus speed cannot be realized with this processor.