Rumour: Phenom II X3 can have fourth core unlocked

Written by Ben Hardwidge

February 24, 2009 | 09:09

Tags: #2 #710 #advanced #auto #calibration #clock #core #cpu-z #defective #ii #phenom #quad #screenshot #triple #tweak #unlock #unlocked #x3 #x4

Companies: #amd #biostar #mod

Considering that AMD’s triple-core X3 CPUs are really quad-core CPUs with one of the cores disabled, it was only a matter of time before a tweak such as this came along. According to Playwares, you can enable the fourth core on a Phenom II X3 710 simply by selecting Auto in the Advanced Clock Calibration setting on a Biostar TA790GX 128M motherboard.

The site has posted some intriguing screenshots that show a test system’s startup screen before and after the BIOS change. It starts off detecting a Phenom II X3 710 that’s been overclocked to 3.12GHz, but after the BIOS setting it then detects the CPU as a 3.12GHz Phenom II X4 10, complete with four cores.

If this is genuine, then it doesn’t look like this is just the BIOS detecting the CPU wrongly either. The site has also run CPU-Z on the CPU before and after, which appears to show the same CPU with four cores after the BIOS change. Oddly, the CPU-Z screenshot detects the CPU as having an AM2+ socket rather than AM3, but this is how CPU-Z currently detects AM3 Phenom II X3 CPUs. The site also ran the CPU tests from 3DMark06 on the system, and the score increased from 3795 to 4776 with the extra core enabled. Meanwhile, to show that the system was stable, the site also ran Prime95 across all four CPUs.

Stability is going to be the issue here if anything, as there’s a good chance that some X3 CPUs will have their fourth core disabled because it was defective. This was always a potential benefit of AMD’s native quad-core design, as it allows AMD to simply disable one core of a quad-core CPU if one core is faulty, but still sell the CPU as a triple-core processor.

We’ve yet to try out this tweak for ourselves, and we're not entirely sure why adjusting the Advanced Clock Calibration setting would enable an extra core. Also, if this tweak is genuine then it’s still unlikely to work on every single Phenom II X3 710 processor out there. However, at a cost of £105.32 inc VAT for a Phenom II X3 710, you’d get a pretty good deal if you really could unlock the fourth core and get a quad-core CPU for just over £100.

If this tweak is genuine, would you be interested in picking up a cheap Phenom II X3 if you could unlock the fourth core? Let us know your thoughts in the forums.

Via VR-Zone
Discuss this in the forums
YouTube logo
MSI MPG Velox 100R Chassis Review

October 14 2021 | 15:04

TOP STORIES

SUGGESTED FOR YOU