Hello, this is my first post here, looks like a nice site.
I am writing this note on my P3-700 (no e, there is only one p3-700, thus no e designation) running at 1050MHz. It has been running like this since the first of this year, without a single lockup. Here\'s the scoop on my recipe:
Slot 1 OEM C step (CA2 revision) P3-700
ASUS P3B-F i440bx m/b (i815 gives up a lot in memory throughput, VIA even more)
Infineon 7.5ns PC133 CAS 3 256MB DIMM, late model high density type
Hercules/Guillmot Prophet2 64MB GF2-GTS (clocked hard

http://images.thetechguide.com/forum/public/style_emoticons/<#EMO_DIR#>/smile.gif\' class=\'bbc_emoticon\' alt=\'

\' />)
And a bunch of other stuff not related to the 1.05 GHz ability.
I run the FSB at 150MHz (the Infineon ram is so good I can run CAS2!), yielding the 1050MHz on-chip clock rate. This is only possible on a bx board if you use the finest ram available (Infineon), and a video card that will deal with the out-of-spec 100MHz AGP clock. Matrox G400 and G450 handle it fine, along with virtually any quality GeForce based video card.
I run 1.8V with this chip, a modest Cofan cast heatsink, and use the stellar Antec SX830 case. Bear in mind that the 1050MHz is the outer limit for even a C step chip, older cores won\'t get near it. Also understand that not all examples will be 100% stable at this rate. I had a second example that never was 100%, even with the voltage pushed to 1.85V. Better cooling will not turn the second example into the first

http://images.thetechguide.com/forum/public/style_emoticons/<#EMO_DIR#>/smile.gif\' class=\'bbc_emoticon\' alt=\'

\' />
This setup is rocket fast, as good \'ole bx is still wrings more performance from each MHz than any other chipset. I have done this same setup on a ABIT BF6 bx board, it will do the same with the same ram and cpu.
HTH,
Steve