Originally posted by: cmdrdredd
higher FSB provides more bandwidth to work with. You may or may not notice it, but I bet benchmark numbers will show a difference.
Originally posted by: cmdrdredd
higher FSB provides more bandwidth to work with. You may or may not notice it, but I bet benchmark numbers will show a difference.
Originally posted by: dguy6789
The E4300 is 9x200=1.8Ghz correct? The E6300 is 7x266=1.86Ghz correct? If this is the case, the E4300 would be the superior chip as you can reach higher clock speeds with it as a direct result of removing a good portion of FSB strain from the motherboard. This is the same reason the Pentium D 805 is superior to the Pentium D 820.(20x multiplier vs 14x)
This is of course assuming that those are the only differences between the two chips, which I cannot confirm as I have done little research in relation to the E4300.
Originally posted by: dguy6789
Originally posted by: cmdrdredd
higher FSB provides more bandwidth to work with. You may or may not notice it, but I bet benchmark numbers will show a difference.
If you don't notice it, then the performance difference means nothing, correct?