2.4 is Intel's sweet number! Prescott too!

THUGSROOK

Elite Member
Feb 3, 2001
11,847
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hehe ;)

i got my 2.4a Prescott upto 3.6ghz, but was hot enough to make toast from bread.
and just like H|OCP mentions, was not completly stable due to heat.
actually there was so much heat that it effected the memory to the point that memory tweaks were not possible.

Alaskans only apply ;)

oh, and BTW: it was slower then a OCed 2.4b (due to lack of memory tweaks)
....i dont reccommend Prescott CPUs for OCers.
 

stardust

Golden Member
May 17, 2003
1,282
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Originally posted by: THUGSROOK
hehe ;)

i got my 2.4a Prescott upto 3.6ghz, but was hot enough to make toast from bread.
and just like H|OCP mentions, was not completly stable due to heat.
actually there was so much heat that it effected the memory to the point that memory tweaks were not possible.

Alaskans only apply ;)

oh, and BTW: it was slower then a OCed 2.4b (due to lack of memory tweaks)
....i dont reccommend Prescott CPUs for OCers.

Wow, did you try water cooling? How did u get your hands on a 2.4A prescott?
Ok, sorry I guess I was a step late, but 2.4 to 3.5-3.7 is an amazing overclock.
Well I supposed the 800FSB 2.4C is what I would go for.. heat issue for the prescott is THAT bad huh?
 

oldfart

Lifer
Dec 2, 1999
10,207
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It is also lacking Hyperthreading, runs hotter and is slower clock for clock than NW. No thanks.
 

Lyfer

Diamond Member
May 28, 2003
5,842
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Originally posted by: oldfart
It is also lacking Hyperthreading, runs hotter and is slower clock for clock than NW. No thanks.

Also YMMV. I have really bad luck when getting a good stepping, I'll prolly get a dud if I fork up the cash to build a new Intel rig.:)
 

slag

Lifer
Dec 14, 2000
10,473
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Funny, I had ZERO problems overclocking a 2.8e to 3.5 ghz.

You sure you guys aren't doing something wrong?

Heat isnt a problem if you have decent air circulation. Its not really about keeping the processor super cold as keeping everything around it cold as well.

 

MichaelZ

Senior member
Oct 12, 2003
871
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dude, it's a 2.4 prescott not a 2.8
rolleye.gif
 

Soulkeeper

Diamond Member
Nov 23, 2001
6,732
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i can get my 2.8e to almost 3.5ghz fully stable
but temps get up past 70C and i just don't feel comfortable
the temps limit me from going too far

i'm getting me a dangerden waterblock for this sucker
 

gsellis

Diamond Member
Dec 4, 2003
6,061
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Check that last few pages of the official ASUS PC-DL page in Motherboards at 2CPU. How about Dual Xeon 2.4's (533) running at 3.5 (and been to 3.6). Today will be a day where that may be the old mark. P4Northwood found more voltage last night and will be testing it today. And those are aircooled!

Yep, 2.4 is Intel's sweet spot.
 

stardust

Golden Member
May 17, 2003
1,282
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Originally posted by: hytek369
Originally posted by: oldfart
It is also lacking Hyperthreading, runs hotter and is slower clock for clock than NW. No thanks.

i know, why did intel do that?

economical reasons, they tried keeping the price of the chip under $150
 

Budman

Lifer
Oct 9, 1999
10,980
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Originally posted by: stardust
Originally posted by: hytek369
Originally posted by: oldfart
It is also lacking Hyperthreading, runs hotter and is slower clock for clock than NW. No thanks.

i know, why did intel do that?

economical reasons, they tried keeping the price of the chip under $150

it's got nothing to do with it,HT has been on p4 since northwood days,it just wasnt enabled,it doesnt cost more to produce a HT chip because HT is on the chip to begin with.

they just disabled it so it wouldnt be as fast as the higher priced HT enabled chips.
 

stardust

Golden Member
May 17, 2003
1,282
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Originally posted by: Budman
Originally posted by: stardust
Originally posted by: hytek369
Originally posted by: oldfart
It is also lacking Hyperthreading, runs hotter and is slower clock for clock than NW. No thanks.

i know, why did intel do that?

economical reasons, they tried keeping the price of the chip under $150

it's got nothing to do with it,HT has been on p4 since northwood days,it just wasnt enabled,it doesnt cost more to produce a HT chip because HT is on the chip to begin with.

they just disabled it so it wouldnt be as fast as the higher priced HT enabled chips.


Hmm, are you sure they didn't take the prescott chips that were supposed to have HT, but failed testing so they disabled it and rebadged it as the 2.4a and the 2.8a? that would be economical..
 

First

Lifer
Jun 3, 2002
10,518
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I'm totally confused why Kyle is hyping the 2.4A. It runs hotter, slower and less stable unless you're using water or better. If you want overclocking on the cheap go 2500+M. If you want overclocking for a reasonable price, go 2.8C.

Or, just ask Thugs. ;)
 

smahoney

Senior member
Apr 8, 2003
278
0
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I agree - I have my 2.8C running at 3.6 right now with a 1:1 mem divider at 257MHz FSB. Even a 5:4 would still be perfect for PC3200 memory. Runs pretty cool at 1.55 volts. 2.4 might seem nice, but how many boards can go to 250 vs. the number that can go to 275+ and how much more do they cost? Any processor savings will be eaten up by the more expensive motherboard you will need to run at such high FSB settings - not too mention the stress on the motherboards available today to run those toaster er prescott chips ;)
 

slag

Lifer
Dec 14, 2000
10,473
81
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Originally posted by: i82lazyboy
dude, it's a 2.4 prescott not a 2.8
rolleye.gif

dude, its an overclocked prescott.. thats the argument, not the base speed..

lol
 

Jeff7181

Lifer
Aug 21, 2002
18,368
11
81
A P4 without Hyper-Threading is like going to a strip club with no strippers... what's the point?
 

Echo3

Member
Apr 27, 2000
142
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:D

Well, I am not sure that is true yet! Hyperthreading is a cool feature, But how the O/S and applications work together is not necessarily quite there per se...

The o/s supports it, but other than that, I am not sure - I have a P4 2.4B OC'd to 3.0ghz and it's very fast -

Anyway there was a German website that did I pretty thorough job testing Hyperthreading - and the only yield that was seen as benefical was when it came to video streaming over the net... 200FSB X4 (quad pumped as it were) - Nice but - as AMD as showed us, "It's not how fast you go, but how to go fast" ( I think I'll put that as part of my forum signature).... the way the athlons execute instructions is both, efficient and better, and I mean way better - Now I am just rambling -

I totally forgot what this thread was about.... Oh yeah the last post I am responding to - If you have a P4 without HT then yada, yada -

Hyperthreading???? I'll stick with my P4B - for a long time - And after that - AMD - Then a Mac - Oh no - Oh yes!!!

c ya
rolleye.gif
 

Jeff7181

Lifer
Aug 21, 2002
18,368
11
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Echo3... you might want to check out all the testing Duvie has done on Hyper-Threading. You will learn a lot.
 

stardust

Golden Member
May 17, 2003
1,282
0
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Originally posted by: Evan Lieb
I'm totally confused why Kyle is hyping the 2.4A. It runs hotter, slower and less stable unless you're using water or better. If you want overclocking on the cheap go 2500+M. If you want overclocking for a reasonable price, go 2.8C.

Or, just ask Thugs. ;)

well now that doesn't exclude us users with water cooling kits :)

Yeah, 2.8C is a great processor. Personally i think 2.6C is the best..but some people like the old 133x4 fsb and seeing that 2.4A prescott go 3.7ghz is pretty amazing. (My 2.6C achieved a max of 3.5ghz with 0.1 Vcore voltage increase.)