When looking for a new BX board for overclocking I steered clear of ABIT because of stability problems when using cheap RAM. I had problems with an ABIT PX5 when using more than one SIM and high bus speeds, and read plenty of reports about similar problems with BX6 and BH6.
I settled on the AOPEN AX6BC and thought pin taping would get over the lack of voltage adjustment. My board runs stable at 117 FSB with 3 cheap PC 66 ram. I then decided to solder wires and switches to the pins of the motherboard and processor to allow easy adjustment of voltages.
While trying this I came up with an easy method of allowing all core voltages 1.80-3.5 on any slot one board. To understand how this works you must know how the pins select the voltage. Voltage is selected by pins VID0 - VID4. These pins can either be open (not connected to anything) or earthed (connected to Vss - motherboard earth). The processor VID pins are connected to Vss or left open when the processor is made, a different combintion for each voltage, allowing it to tell the MB what voltage it needs, taping allows us to open an earthed pin thus giving the alternative voltages 2.2, 2.4 etc.
OK so the MB reads the processor VID pins and sets the voltage, why not bypass the CPU pins completely and fool to MB into giving us any core voltage. This is more simple than it sounds.
If all goes well by checking the intel specs VID pin table you can set any VID pin to be open or earthed and so set any CPU core voltage.



I'm in Aus despite my email address. Have fun melting those chips
Of course, 3.5V is WAAAAAY above what you would normally run, unless you have some kind of monster active cooling.. and even then, probably not. I would be interested in people's comments on this one, too. Drop me a line - agg@overclockers.com.au.