thanks for your patience & assistance.
 tim hall
 Last Saturday 24 July 2004 01:42, I went:
  Last Friday 23 July 2004 22:32, Rick B was like:
         Yes, I would think that you would notice a
big difference. If
 before adjusting you had a 66.8mhz fsb x 3.5 multiplier = 233.8mhz and
 after you have a 66.8mhz fsb x 8.0 = 566mhz. 
 Great, thanks for confirming that.
  You might want to check and
 see if you have a fan on your cpu (I have a 566mhz that doesn't), if not
 and you do notice instability adding one would probably fix it. Also if
 you dont have a fan now, adding one for $10 is a cheap way to  overclock
 it. 
 I do have a fan on it, although I could probably fit a bigger quieter one
 in. I'm not interested in overclocking as such, just getting the
 straightforward best performance.
  I'm wondering though, where does the 100mhz
fsb you mentioned come
 in? You will either have a 66.8mhz fsb times a multiplier or a 100mhz
 fsb times a multiplier 
 These fluffy figures probably come from my misunderstanding of the manual.
 CPU Freq: 600MHz
 CPU Ratio: 6x (?)
 CPU FSB: 100MHz
 It also says: Warning: Intel 810/810DC-100 chipset supports a maximum of
 100MHz CPU FSB blah ...
 I think from the jumper settings that the display cache runs at the same
 speed, there's nothing to suggest there's any value in pushing it.
 So far I'm not seeing any instability, so I'll stick with this and see how
 it goes.
          As far as memory goes, I think most
people that read this list
 would agree that you can never have to much. When you run out of
 physical ram and have to swap to disk it slows the machine waaayy down
 (and causes dropouts). 
 And dropouts, right. This is now my biggest (but not insurmountable)
 problem, which can obviously be fixed by throwing some cash at it when I
 get some. That's a Win AFAIC :-)
 Thanks for increasing my understanding of this subject.
 tim hall