WT
Diamond Member
- Sep 21, 2000
- 4,816
- 59
- 91
Seems that the concensus on the OCWorkbench forums is that this will work fine, so I ordered the 5000+ B.E. today, along with a HSF from the Egg. When I went to buy the combo deal on Newegg with this chip and the Mushkin RAM it was OOS (first, the Corsair - it too is OOS), so I gave up on buying from the Egg and found it on TD for $30 less plus the CPU came with Call of Juarez for free. Newegg did have a deal on a Cooler Master tower HSF (a blatant Arctic Cooler Freezer Pro 7 ripoff) for $22-20 MIR, so I should be able to accomplish this upgrade for under $150 (keeping in mind the AM2CPU card is coming as a gift on Xmas).
AMD 5000+ Black Edition = 99
Cooler Master Hyper TX2 = 2 AR
Super Talent DDR2/800 2gb = 44
Asrock Am2CPU upgrd card = free
When I bought this board back in '06, I didn't realize how far I could drag it along, but it continues to run everything I throw at it. It has been my bench rig for over 2+ years as well, and has served as my Vista RC1 beta testbed, as well as more recently my Windows Home Server beta PC. As much as I upgrade, it still had a place aside of my workbench, and after this latest upgrade, it actually will be a very nice spare gamer rig if I ever have friends over for some LAN action. After going Intel for the first time since '97 earlier this year, its nice to know that we still have AMD around offering up competition. Without AMD, that quad core 6600 you have wouldn't be as cheap in price as the e6600 I bought in June, so keep that in mind before you write off AMD for good. I'll make sure and post my upgrade experience in late December somewheres around here.
AMD 5000+ Black Edition = 99
Cooler Master Hyper TX2 = 2 AR
Super Talent DDR2/800 2gb = 44
Asrock Am2CPU upgrd card = free
When I bought this board back in '06, I didn't realize how far I could drag it along, but it continues to run everything I throw at it. It has been my bench rig for over 2+ years as well, and has served as my Vista RC1 beta testbed, as well as more recently my Windows Home Server beta PC. As much as I upgrade, it still had a place aside of my workbench, and after this latest upgrade, it actually will be a very nice spare gamer rig if I ever have friends over for some LAN action. After going Intel for the first time since '97 earlier this year, its nice to know that we still have AMD around offering up competition. Without AMD, that quad core 6600 you have wouldn't be as cheap in price as the e6600 I bought in June, so keep that in mind before you write off AMD for good. I'll make sure and post my upgrade experience in late December somewheres around here.