• We’re currently investigating an issue related to the forum theme and styling that is impacting page layout and visual formatting. The problem has been identified, and we are actively working on a resolution. There is no impact to user data or functionality, this is strictly a front-end display issue. We’ll post an update once the fix has been deployed. Thanks for your patience while we get this sorted.

AthlonXP help

Emultra

Golden Member
I'm going to buy an AthlonXP, probably a 2400+.

Palomino, Thoroughbred, Barton?

266 or 333Mhz bus?

What does the "In a Box" suffix mean?

Diminishing returns w/ cost after 2600/2700+, I've noticed (Barton 2600+/Thoroughbred 2700+, socket A, 333Mhz bus).
 
Palomino were the first xp cpu, followed by the thoroughbred, and later the barton. If your board can support a 2500+ barton the extra cache on them will help out.


"In a box" means retail.

Check out the for sale/trade forums if your looking for a deal. You should be able to find a decent cpu for $50-60 there.
 
Well, what board to you have?

The best bet is to go with one of the mobile Barton chips (2400+, 2500+, or 2600+, low wattage) as that gives you the most overclocking headroom and unlocked multipliers.

Stay away from the Palomino's, and only get a T-bred if your board only supports a 266FSB chip and you don't plan on overclocking much.

With the right board and RAM, you could easily get 2.3-2.4ghz (or more) with one of the mobile chips. That's pretty good considering the stock speed of the 3200+ is 2.2ghz.

"In the Box" probably means its the retail version of the chip, and comes with the AMD stock heatsink and fan.
 
I indeed agree that the mobiles are the best overclocker but you're not going to get much of a warranty like 3 years with the retail regular Athlon XPs. For instance, my Mobile Athlon XP 2600+ has a 7-day warranty. The reason? Because companies that sell them KNOW you're going to overclock the living sh*t outta 'em!🙂
 
Originally posted by: Ronnie
Palomino were the first xp cpu, followed by the thoroughbred, and later the barton. If your board can support a 2500+ barton the extra cache on them will help out.
When you're refering to support, are you talking about the 2500+ or is there something special about the Barton as such, compared to the 2500+ Thorough?

But in general, Barton is the way to go?


BlueWeasel: I am buying a new board. Which one, I'll figure out when I know which CPU to get. Or should it be the other way around? 🙂

What is the stock performance difference between an "identical" xx00XP stationary and mobile?

I already have a Silverado fan, if I clean that one out (it went with my 1600XP) I should be able to use it, I think.

I live in Sweden, so I don't know if they wanna ship their CPU's to me at the trade forum. 🙂
 
Back
Top