Originally posted by: VERTIGGO
I'm planning on getting phase change when I have the time and hopefully OCZ will come through eventually. Until then I may pick up an XP120 Ultra dual tower or whatever its called
Originally posted by: Amaroque
Originally posted by: VERTIGGO
I'm planning on getting phase change when I have the time and hopefully OCZ will come through eventually. Until then I may pick up an XP120 Ultra dual tower or whatever its called
Phase change... That's cool, If you like the sound of a hammer drill (whenever your computer is on) in your house!
Originally posted by: Markfw900
Both my X2's and C2D's do the same thing. I have to keep downclocking them (from the original OC) over time to be stable.
Originally posted by: coolpurplefan
Originally posted by: Markfw900
Both my X2's and C2D's do the same thing. I have to keep downclocking them (from the original OC) over time to be stable.
Wow, I'm glad I don't overclock. I'd like my current machines to last 10 years. I mean, they'll be just backup/testing/filesharing/whatever machines after a couple of years, but I'd rather see them last.
Originally posted by: Amaroque
Originally posted by: coolpurplefan
Originally posted by: Markfw900
Both my X2's and C2D's do the same thing. I have to keep downclocking them (from the original OC) over time to be stable.
Wow, I'm glad I don't overclock. I'd like my current machines to last 10 years. I mean, they'll be just backup/testing/filesharing/whatever machines after a couple of years, but I'd rather see them last.
10 years??? OMG, cell phones will probably be faster than your current machine in 10 years! Five years is pusing it...
I mean, unless you are into antiques... I guess that's cool.![]()
Originally posted by: Amaroque
Originally posted by: coolpurplefan
Originally posted by: Markfw900
Both my X2's and C2D's do the same thing. I have to keep downclocking them (from the original OC) over time to be stable.
Wow, I'm glad I don't overclock. I'd like my current machines to last 10 years. I mean, they'll be just backup/testing/filesharing/whatever machines after a couple of years, but I'd rather see them last.
10 years??? OMG, cell phones will probably be faster than your current machine in 10 years! Five years is pusing it...
I mean, unless you are into antiques... I guess that's cool.![]()
Originally posted by: Conky
That's interesting. My C2D overclock runs just fine at the same settings as it did 6 months ago. But this is probably due to the fact that to get 3.2 from my E6400 I must use 1.3125v and to get 3.6 I use 1.35v. Considering that stock voltage is 1.3525v I'm not even really overclocking.Originally posted by: Markfw900
Both my X2's and C2D's do the same thing. I have to keep downclocking them (from the original OC) over time to be stable.![]()
Nah, you can get a NICE phase change solution for ~$800.Originally posted by: Googer
Originally posted by: Amaroque
Originally posted by: VERTIGGO
I'm planning on getting phase change when I have the time and hopefully OCZ will come through eventually. Until then I may pick up an XP120 Ultra dual tower or whatever its called
Phase change... That's cool, If you like the sound of a hammer drill (whenever your computer is on) in your house!
Phase Change Cooling will cost you well over $1,000 (closer to $1,500). Just to make your Celeron run like a $900 extreme edition. You would be much better off to get the Fastest Processor money can buy in liu of the fancy rich mans greenhouse gas producing cooling setup.
Originally posted by: JackBurton
Nah, you can get a NICE phase change solution for ~$800.Originally posted by: Googer
Originally posted by: Amaroque
Originally posted by: VERTIGGO
I'm planning on getting phase change when I have the time and hopefully OCZ will come through eventually. Until then I may pick up an XP120 Ultra dual tower or whatever its called
Phase change... That's cool, If you like the sound of a hammer drill (whenever your computer is on) in your house!
Phase Change Cooling will cost you well over $1,000 (closer to $1,500). Just to make your Celeron run like a $900 extreme edition. You would be much better off to get the Fastest Processor money can buy in liu of the fancy rich mans greenhouse gas producing cooling setup.![]()
Originally posted by: Googer
Originally posted by: JackBurton
Nah, you can get a NICE phase change solution for ~$800.Originally posted by: Googer
Originally posted by: Amaroque
Originally posted by: VERTIGGO
I'm planning on getting phase change when I have the time and hopefully OCZ will come through eventually. Until then I may pick up an XP120 Ultra dual tower or whatever its called
Phase change... That's cool, If you like the sound of a hammer drill (whenever your computer is on) in your house!
Phase Change Cooling will cost you well over $1,000 (closer to $1,500). Just to make your Celeron run like a $900 extreme edition. You would be much better off to get the Fastest Processor money can buy in liu of the fancy rich mans greenhouse gas producing cooling setup.![]()
Like I said, you are better off spending $500 more on the faster processor than getting fancy cooling setups.
I liken it to people who buy Civics and spend $500,000 to make them look and not quite drive like Ferraris. You would have been better off just buying the Ferrari in place of a lesser car who's reliability has been severely compromised due to the modifications.
Originally posted by: apoppin
Originally posted by: Googer
Originally posted by: JackBurton
Nah, you can get a NICE phase change solution for ~$800.Originally posted by: Googer
Originally posted by: Amaroque
Originally posted by: VERTIGGO
I'm planning on getting phase change when I have the time and hopefully OCZ will come through eventually. Until then I may pick up an XP120 Ultra dual tower or whatever its called
Phase change... That's cool, If you like the sound of a hammer drill (whenever your computer is on) in your house!
Phase Change Cooling will cost you well over $1,000 (closer to $1,500). Just to make your Celeron run like a $900 extreme edition. You would be much better off to get the Fastest Processor money can buy in liu of the fancy rich mans greenhouse gas producing cooling setup.![]()
Like I said, you are better off spending $500 more on the faster processor than getting fancy cooling setups.
I liken it to people who buy Civics and spend $500,000 to make them look and not quite drive like Ferraris. You would have been better off just buying the Ferrari in place of a lesser car who's reliability has been severely compromised due to the modifications.
some of us are a little more balanced ... i preferred to buy an e4300 for $110 and a $80 thermalright cooler that i can use for the next CPU i get also ... having a 1.8Ghz C2D equal the performance of the top intel C2D for a couple of hundred dollars less is a nice plus
no it certainly is not "more sensible" ... it is YOUR PoVOriginally posted by: Googer
Originally posted by: apoppin
Originally posted by: Googer
Originally posted by: JackBurton
Nah, you can get a NICE phase change solution for ~$800.Originally posted by: Googer
Originally posted by: Amaroque
Originally posted by: VERTIGGO
I'm planning on getting phase change when I have the time and hopefully OCZ will come through eventually. Until then I may pick up an XP120 Ultra dual tower or whatever its called
Phase change... That's cool, If you like the sound of a hammer drill (whenever your computer is on) in your house!
Phase Change Cooling will cost you well over $1,000 (closer to $1,500). Just to make your Celeron run like a $900 extreme edition. You would be much better off to get the Fastest Processor money can buy in liu of the fancy rich mans greenhouse gas producing cooling setup.![]()
Like I said, you are better off spending $500 more on the faster processor than getting fancy cooling setups.
I liken it to people who buy Civics and spend $500,000 to make them look and not quite drive like Ferraris. You would have been better off just buying the Ferrari in place of a lesser car who's reliability has been severely compromised due to the modifications.
some of us are a little more balanced ... i preferred to buy an e4300 for $110 and a $80 thermalright cooler that i can use for the next CPU i get also ... having a 1.8Ghz C2D equal the performance of the top intel C2D for a couple of hundred dollars less is a nice plus
It's more sensable to spend $190 on the faster chip (possibly with larger cache) than to spend $110 on the processor and $80 on a component that does not contain transistors.
It's more sensable to spend $190 on the faster chip (possibly with larger cache) than to spend $110 on the processor and $80 on a component that does not contain transistors.
Originally posted by: VERTIGGO
My apologies for misleading, I had to switch motherboards, so the temps are high just from being a hasty AS5 job.
Do you think that increase of about 9C is what is making the difference?
Originally posted by: apoppin
no it certainly is not "more sensible" ... it is YOUR PoVOriginally posted by: Googer
Originally posted by: apoppin
Originally posted by: Googer
Originally posted by: JackBurton
Nah, you can get a NICE phase change solution for ~$800.Originally posted by: Googer
Originally posted by: Amaroque
Originally posted by: VERTIGGO
I'm planning on getting phase change when I have the time and hopefully OCZ will come through eventually. Until then I may pick up an XP120 Ultra dual tower or whatever its called
Phase change... That's cool, If you like the sound of a hammer drill (whenever your computer is on) in your house!
Phase Change Cooling will cost you well over $1,000 (closer to $1,500). Just to make your Celeron run like a $900 extreme edition. You would be much better off to get the Fastest Processor money can buy in liu of the fancy rich mans greenhouse gas producing cooling setup.![]()
Like I said, you are better off spending $500 more on the faster processor than getting fancy cooling setups.
I liken it to people who buy Civics and spend $500,000 to make them look and not quite drive like Ferraris. You would have been better off just buying the Ferrari in place of a lesser car who's reliability has been severely compromised due to the modifications.
some of us are a little more balanced ... i preferred to buy an e4300 for $110 and a $80 thermalright cooler that i can use for the next CPU i get also ... having a 1.8Ghz C2D equal the performance of the top intel C2D for a couple of hundred dollars less is a nice plus
It's more sensable to spend $190 on the faster chip (possibly with larger cache) than to spend $110 on the processor and $80 on a component that does not contain transistors.
for me it is FAR more sensible to get the e4300 over 3.0Ghz AND also my next relatively budget CPU with my same Thermalright cooler ...
it has worked for me since i have been OC'ing ... longer then i have been here
no failures ... just completely *free performance* ... courtesy of intel
--thanks, intel
Originally posted by: njdevilsfan87
It's more sensable to spend $190 on the faster chip (possibly with larger cache) than to spend $110 on the processor and $80 on a component that does not contain transistors.
Agree, I bought an E6600 with a $35 Scythe Mine and am clocking at 3.4GHz at 1.408V load with my load temperatures less then 60C (that is when my room is less than 80F ambient).
But then again... I did buy the E6600 almost a year ago when I actually thought 4MB L2 actually made a difference of 2MB.
fortunately i did my research and the extreme FSB of a good OC more than makes up for itOriginally posted by: Googer
Originally posted by: njdevilsfan87
It's more sensable to spend $190 on the faster chip (possibly with larger cache) than to spend $110 on the processor and $80 on a component that does not contain transistors.
Agree, I bought an E6600 with a $35 Scythe Mine and am clocking at 3.4GHz at 1.408V load with my load temperatures less then 60C (that is when my room is less than 80F ambient).
But then again... I did buy the E6600 almost a year ago when I actually thought 4MB L2 actually made a difference of 2MB.
Once you buy a CPU, you cannot buy more cache to go with it.
t's still not an extreme edition. There are several differences:
1.Your budget chip has very little cache. On the other hand, top of the line chips have bundles of high speed cache.
2.The Genuine Extreme Edition runs cooler, is more stable, does not generate errors, does not require fancy subzero cooling, and won't fail prematurely.
3.The real Extreme Edition is multiplier unlocked.
4.The real extreme edition has a FULLY INTACT WARRANTY.
You obviously didn't know this, but going from 2MB of L2 cache to 4MB, on a C2D, has between a 5% & a 12% speed difference, depending on the software being run. That means all you have to do is overclock to 12% faster, and there is no longer any speed difference.Originally posted by: Googer
It's still not an extreme edition. There are several differences:
Your budget chip has very little cache. On the other hand, top of the line chips have bundles of high speed cache.
Anyone who knows how to overclock has none of the problems you've just mentioned. I've been overclocking since '91 or '92, and I've never had a single processor go bad, never had to reinstall software or any OS because of errors, and never used anything except air cooling.The Genuine Extreme Edition runs cooler, is more stable, does not generate errors, does not require fancy subzero cooling, and won't fail prematurely.
That's about as necessary as it having arms and legs, with the motherboards and RAM that are available. Of course, it's good for people who don't have the slightest idea how to overclock, I guess.The real Extreme Edition is multiplier unlocked.
Yet it costs 10x more than apoppin's processor. How much do you want to wager that apoppin won't go through 10 E4300's, before it's obsolete?The real extreme edition has a FULLY INTACT WARRANTY.
Nah, it's like making a Ferrari faster. I'm not talking about overclocking budget chips, I'm talking about Quad cores reaching far beyond what you can buy off the shelf. You ain't gonna get anywhere close to 4GHz with a quad core on air. And yeah, that is a STABLE overclock. No flash POST screen overclock. So in September when the Q6600 drop to ~$266, you can pick up a phase change system for ~$800 and basically have a 4GHz+ quad core machine. OR you can buy a QX6800 (2.93GHz) for ~$1200 and get a very unstable 3.46GHz overclock (on air) with CRAZY temps. For me, I'll stick with the phase change Q6600.Originally posted by: Googer
Originally posted by: JackBurton
Nah, you can get a NICE phase change solution for ~$800.Originally posted by: Googer
Originally posted by: Amaroque
Originally posted by: VERTIGGO
I'm planning on getting phase change when I have the time and hopefully OCZ will come through eventually. Until then I may pick up an XP120 Ultra dual tower or whatever its called
Phase change... That's cool, If you like the sound of a hammer drill (whenever your computer is on) in your house!
Phase Change Cooling will cost you well over $1,000 (closer to $1,500). Just to make your Celeron run like a $900 extreme edition. You would be much better off to get the Fastest Processor money can buy in liu of the fancy rich mans greenhouse gas producing cooling setup.![]()
Like I said, you are better off spending $500 more on the faster processor than getting fancy cooling setups.
I liken it to people who buy Civics and spend $500,000 to make them look and not quite drive like Ferraris. You would have been better off just buying the Ferrari in place of a lesser car who's reliability has been severely compromised due to the modifications.
Ummm, not so much.Originally posted by: apoppin
fortunately i did my research and the extreme FSB of a good OC more than makes up for it