First post, by mrau
hi there,
this may be a not-so-smart question, but since i failed at googling it, i thought i'd ask here:
so, why does the 487 on the mobo disable the first cpu and take over all calculations? if i understood well, this is new, the 387 only did math;
reason i ask is this: if i put a pretty nice "high performance" ALU 486 on the mobo and then want to override its weak FPU with another chip, its the weaker ALU of the added 487 unit that will be used in the system, and not the original "high performance" ALU unit, that was on the mobo originally - i cannot combine ALU and FPU the way i want? 🙁 and it seems totally ineconomic - more chip, more electrical power draw - less overall computational power?
is it the cpu connector that forces this weird way, or what is it?
BTW i found lots of descriptions - what pin does what in the 486 socket, but specific description as to how exactly the 486 is to be handled for example if i wanted to make an FPGA northbridge to run it i could not find; can anyone help me with this?
i'd appreciate any help/insight
thanks
dd