cbn
Lifer
I'm confused, how can an Athlon II unlock to anything Phenom II-ish? The latter has L3 cache, the former doesn't.
Some of the Athlon II x2 220 processors used the Deneb die rather than the Regor die.
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I'm confused, how can an Athlon II unlock to anything Phenom II-ish? The latter has L3 cache, the former doesn't.
also AMD released propus (no l3) Phenom II X4s, like the 840..
and the MB recognizes some unlocked athlons as "phenom" even without the l3 being enabled (or physically there)
Either a "AC" (Deneb) or "AD" (Propus) on top. More than 95% sold and listed on eBay are "AE" (Regor), with only two cores max and no other cores available. For the 5%, there are more Propus cores by 3 times the amount than Deneb.Walt, for your Athlon II x2 220 that unlocked to Phenom II x4....what stepping did it have?
I would much rather take a more powerful dual-core overclockable to 3.90 GHz with two cores missing due to faster single-thread. Besides, $8.99 for this 95W dual-core is the fastest and cheapest I've found so far. I rarely use the two additional quad-cores for basic computing.3.5 Ghz for four cores is pretty good.
Look how a Phenom II x 4 965 (3.4 Ghz) did in 2013 Tom's hardware gaming comparison test:
Back to AM3, try Athlon 210e 45w on eBay. Have some success, about 50% chance. Over 90% made were based on "AD" Propus quad-cores, but they can only be overclocked up to 3.10 GHz max on stock voltage (a little slow) because of the 45W TDP.
AMD did a lot of weird downbinning with their cores. Including, evidently, selling quad-core dice as dual-core CPUs, that in specific cases could be "unlocked" back into quad-cores. Pretty neat and crazy stuff.I though the Athlon II dual cores were native, not binned.
Some of the Athlon II x2 220 processors used the Deneb die rather than the Regor die.
also AMD released propus (no l3) Phenom II X4s, like the 840..
and the MB recognizes some unlocked athlons as "phenom" even without the l3 being enabled (or physically there)
It fully supports it. Already installed three 210e, and only one can unlock to quad-core. The two that didn't unlock I already sold. The CPU list by Gigabyte is not always complete.Regarding Athlon II x 2 210e, I didn't see that one listed in the Gigabyte GA-78LMT-USB3 CPU support list:
http://www.gigabyte.com/support-downloads/cpu-support-popup.aspx?pid=5195
Are you using another board for that CPU?
The triple-core Athlons are the most-common available if you want to unlock one to quad-core. It's only $10 more than Athlon dual-core. Not a big deal. Depreciation already factored in 90% by now these days.My experience has been with unlocking a triple-core CPU into a quad-core, but that's about it.
Today, I tried disabling one-core to make it run as single-core only, and to my big surprise, it can run up to 4.20 GHz max easily with 1599MHz RAM speed using bus-overclock. I tried over 4.00 GHz with two cores opened, but they failed stability each time and ends up at 3.90 GHz max.
Which one I'm better off? 3.90 GHz dual-core with 1487MHz RAM or 4.20 GHz single-core with 1599MHz RAM?
Update...One eBay buyer purchased a Athlon 220 based on Deneb quad-core (AC) with two cores disabled, but I assume it didn't work because he listed it back on eBay fast. :'(
http://www.ebay.com/itm/321773706590
Now for sale: http://www.ebay.com/itm/131538903527
So I replied to him to try enabling three cores only with 6MB L3 cache. Many times, the forth-core (core 3) is the non-working one.
P.S.: I was the second-highest winning bidder from the original auction. Glad he outbid me. Unlocking is NOT always guaranteed, and anyone should always bid cautiously, like I did.
Now $39.99 AR for Gigabyte GA-78LMT-USB3 (6.0), brand new, one of the lowest-prices I've seen. Pair this one up with Sempron 145 CPU for $7 shipped and unlock it to dual-core, up to 3.36GHz max. 😀
http://www.newegg.com/Product/Product.aspx?Item=N82E16813128565
Cons: The onboard video is not usable with Windows Media Center. Gigabyte states on their product page that this boars supports HDCP, and maybe it does under some circumstances... However I ran into some problems here.
I got this board to replace the dead motherboard in my HTPC. Under Windows 7, Media Center wouldn't allow playback of premium channels (DRM) and under Windows 8 (I did a fresh install) I couldn't even get the video to qualify during media center setup. The onboard video (AMD Radeon HD 3000) is so ancient that AMD ended support for this chip two years ago, and to get the driver working under Windows 8.1 I had to force it to install in Device Manager. I ended up disabling the onboard video and spending another $30 for a cheap 1-slot nVida card with passive cooling just so I could get my HTPC functional again.
Other Thoughts: If you just want a cheap system to get some extra life out of some old memory or CPU this will be fine. Works just fine with Linux and Windows 7, and with a force install of the video driver under Window 8.1 it's even OK for basic stuff like web browsing or office productivity, but if you want to do any kind of video playback or use as an HTPC, you'll need to find a decent low-profile 1-slot video card and just disable the onboard video.
Back to AM3, try Athlon 210e 45w on eBay. Have some success, about 50% chance. Over 90% made were based on "AD" Propus quad-cores, but they can only be overclocked up to 3.10 GHz max on stock voltage (a little slow) because of the 45W TDP.
For dual-core, only Athlon X2 210e, 215, and 220. That's all. For triple-core or better, all of them are Propus quad-cores with one core disabled.Any other dual cores based on Propus?
Radeon HD3000 only supports up to Windows 7 max. For Windows 8 and 10 installation, installation of NET Framework 3.5 is required, plus set compatibility mode to Windows 7 in administrator menu.For anyone wondering about the iGPU on that board, here is one comment from the Newegg reviews (dated 5/12/2015) I found particularly useful:
So for office work and web-browsing the iGPU is fine. With enough CPU*, video playback on You tube shouldn't be a problem. But apparently Windows Media center has DRM that requires certain iGPU features.
*My E6550 Core 2 duo (with GMA 3100, which lacks h.264 decode) is capable of playing 1080p You tube. So it shouldn't take much in the way of AM3/AM3+ CPU to handle 1080p You tube.
what all did the BD family do much better than Stars from a core versus module basis?
For dual-core, only Athlon X2 210e, 215, and 220. That's all. For triple-core or better, all of them are Propus quad-cores with one core disabled.
Nothing. If AMD had simply stayed with Stars, normal incremental improvements would have gotten them something faster and more efficient than Steamroller, with only half the money invested. AMD should have scrapped bulldozer before it ever came to market. I truly do not understand what they were thinking releasing a chip in 2011 with a 95 watt TDP and had a single thread rating of 1100. That monstrocity should have been aborted immediately.