Since the announcement of AMD’s latest chipset, the 890GX, I was having thoughts of a new media centre. The only thing stopping me was cost, 2 weeks till pay day and the quad core I wanted was looking a bit out of my price range, so I thought I’d give core unlocking a go. Until I found out that AMD had removed ACC from the new chipset – Bah!
No surprise really, but I picked up an ASUS M4A89GTD Pro with USB 3.0 (Im thinking of external HDD storage at some point) and bought a Phenom x2 555, to test out the ASUS Core Unlocker feature which in all honesty, I was pretty sceptical about. ACC blocked by AMD in the new chipset and our new motherboard claiming it could still do it...I had to see that for myself.
So from the ASUS Press Release, ASUS claim three different ways to unlock the locked CPU’s, pretty neat – To the BIOS we go.
Ok, so the ACC option is well and truly gone on the new chipset, but has been replaced with “Core Unlocker” which is found under Advanced > CPU Config >
I enabled it, to get the “Active CPU Cores” option appear
One thing I did find pretty cool, was that the number of activated cores show up on the boot screens:
Sandra & CPU-Z with 4 Cores
Sandra & CPU-Z with 3 Cores
Then I figured I’d try another method of unlocking the cores, after all, I know my CPU would unlock all 4 cores...
By moving the switch on the board itself, by the RAM slots, I managed to get the same results
No surprise really, but I picked up an ASUS M4A89GTD Pro with USB 3.0 (Im thinking of external HDD storage at some point) and bought a Phenom x2 555, to test out the ASUS Core Unlocker feature which in all honesty, I was pretty sceptical about. ACC blocked by AMD in the new chipset and our new motherboard claiming it could still do it...I had to see that for myself.
So from the ASUS Press Release, ASUS claim three different ways to unlock the locked CPU’s, pretty neat – To the BIOS we go.
Ok, so the ACC option is well and truly gone on the new chipset, but has been replaced with “Core Unlocker” which is found under Advanced > CPU Config >

I enabled it, to get the “Active CPU Cores” option appear


One thing I did find pretty cool, was that the number of activated cores show up on the boot screens:

Sandra & CPU-Z with 4 Cores

Sandra & CPU-Z with 3 Cores

Then I figured I’d try another method of unlocking the cores, after all, I know my CPU would unlock all 4 cores...
By moving the switch on the board itself, by the RAM slots, I managed to get the same results
