nate at refried.org writes:
 > On Wed, Jun 12, 2002 at 10:23:06AM +0600, K Hinze wrote:
 > > On Tue, 11 Jun 2002 16:14:52 -0500 (CDT)
 > > Michael Vieths <foeclan at visi.com> wrote:
 > > Celeron chips pre-800MHz were 66MHz fsb. If your celeron is running at
 > > 450MHz it MUST be overclocked, and consequently overheating. The one
 > > long-beep typically is overheat alarm. Always has meant that for me.
 > > Clock that chip back to a 66MHz fsb, and hopefully you haven't done
 > > permanent damage.
 > 
 > Let's see the popular chip to do this with was the Celeron 300a.  
 > 
 > 300Mhz  / 66Mhz FSB = 4.5 clock multiplier
 > 450Mhz  / 4.5 clock multiplier = 100Mhz FSB
 > 
 > 66Mhz -> 100Mhz is quite the stretch.  Under carefully controlled
 > conditions the system was actually bootable and maybe ran a 
 > benchmark before crashing.  
 > 
 > Definitely put the FSB back to 66Mhz.  If the system keeps crashing,
 > throw the chip out and get a new one.  If the system is stable and
 > you're still feeling slow, 75Mhz sometimes works.  I have a Celeron 433
 > that I've run at 488 for a couple years without any trouble.  But give
 > the system a few months at 66Mhz before you try that.  

Actually, my mistake.  It's a celeron 500.  But note that I have NEVER
had a crash with this beast.  It's just beeped me into submission. :->

R