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The P4 1.8 is a great little overclocker! You can not change the "multiplier" on most P4's from that erra. You have to instead change the "CPU host frequency", which will intern net you an increase of the front side bus effectively giving you your overclock.
@ stock your CPU is 100 (CPU host frequency) X 18 (multiplier) =1800 Mhz
The 1.8 has a "sweet spot" @ 2.3 Ghz (128 X 18)
Limitations for you will arise if not using suitable ram and or the motherboard / chipset that you have. At stock you need DDR266, but when you attempt to overclock, you will need DDR333. DDR400 will work but, depending on the brand, you're results may decrease. Not all ram lends itself well to overclocking, even if you stay with in spec.
Once you achieve your overclock you'll need to check stability. The system is NOT nessecarily stable even though it may boot into Windows with out issue. Start by running Super PI the 1M test, then Super PI 32M test. If you can get past the second one you will "probably be OK". You should however run "Prime 95" and stress test the system to be sure. Keep an eye on the CPU temps when running this test initally. At 2.3 you will most likely see temps rise to about 50degs.C (which is not a problem).
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