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blue core t-bird???

merl

Junior Member
I just got my T-bird 800 and it says made in Malaysia and the center core is definitely blue. Should I be really happy?
-merl
 
Sure you should be happy. I think all the AMD chips are packaged in Malaysia, although the cores themselved are produced at either the Dresden fab or the Texas fab.
 
bought it at allstarcomponents.com for $160. Could it be this is just a Duron overclocked and sold cheap?
 
This whole blue core/green core is not that big of a deal.

I've tested dozens of CPU's - both green and purple/blue. In the majority of cases they overclock equally.
 
If it was a Duron, it would have less cache. That is about the running rate for 800MHz Tbird, I think, so you should be good. The copper/alluminum core doesn't make a whole lot of difference though.
 
Man, why won't you kids understand...the colour of the core cap means NOTHING!!! It could be a rainbow and still be a goddamn Thunderbird core.
 
For duron, the color of the die makes no difference b/c all durons are made in Austin and are aluminum...HOWEVER, for t-bird, that's another story...although it's hard to identify copper t-bird and aluminum t-bird just base on the die color...from all the reports...it looks like if your t-bird core is blue...the chance are pretty good that you have a copper t-bird...and looks like copper t-bird has the following three types of code...AEEA, AHEA, or AJEA...so if you see a blue t-bird with one of the three code, i would say the percantage it is a copper t-bird is pretty high...
 
What's the exact tribble about it? I forgot the details, does copper conduct heat faster or dissipate heat faster? I'm currently under the impression that copper conducts faster and aluminium dissipates faster.
 
Has anyone proven that there is an "overclockability" delta between the al and copper cores? Other then it just makes sense? I'd be interested in seeing the results of a statistically relevant sample. 🙂

Mike Helvey
 
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