Originally posted by: Peter
Dual Durons is not supported, and would perform rather poorly anyway since only the Athlon MP processors have the extended cache coherency protocol (MOESI) - this is what makes them efficient in dual processing environment.
Ughhh.... I wish people would read a little before they post..
read this
Firing Squad Dual Duron Performance Review
Sure, a dual Athlon MP system offers faster performance than a dual Duron MP system, but how much are you willing to spend for 1% to 8% improvement at the same clock speed? Double the price? Personally, we'd rather save our money for something else.
and this
2CPU.com Tyan Tiger MP (S2460) Review
you can't go wrong with the Tiger MP and a pair of AthlonMPs (or even 1ghz Durons).
and this
xbit labs Dual Duron at Home
as we found out, in most applications there is hardly any difference between dual-Athlon and dual-Duron systems
I have run Dual Durons for over a year.... I just Upgraded to a pair of modded XP 2000+s.
Go here to learn about the XP --> MP Mod
A Duron will run MP

Any Duron 1Ghz and up is a Morgan core, same core (and instruction set!) as the Athlon XP / MP (palamino) just less cache. They will run SMP WITHOUT ANY MODIFICATION
The cheapest way to go AMD Dually is with a pair of Durons and a
Tyan Tiger MP S2460 Motherboard
pricegrabber from $159.00 or
from $152 on pricewatch also keep in mind that it requiers registered ECC DDR memory, (although, some have reported successfully being able to use up to 2 sticks unbuffered, non-ECC) some of the newer 760MPX boards don't but they cost more. The Newer 760MPX chipset has 64bit/66mhz PCI bus and some have USB 2.0 (iwill, i think.). If you are new to AMD SMP then check out the
2cpu.com 760MP/X FAQ., also lurk the motherboard forum over at 2cpu.com, lots of AMD Dually info
On the Tiger MP S2460 If you set j52 to 1-2 when the rest are set for 100 Mhz fsb it will give you 115FSB. Just about any Duron will do that and that gives you a 230Mhz FSB.
As to Dual or No to Dual read
This.
And just as an example:
I don't know what point this makes if any and how scientific it is. Since I was upgrading to dual XP 2000's anyway I figured I would try an experiment.
I ran UT2003 Demo Benchmarks on a single XP then Dual, Then Single XP w/ a Seti Command Line Client running and CPU Priority set to High, Then Dual XP w/ a Seti Command Line Client running and CPU Priority set to High. Here are the Benchies:
Dual Duron 1Ghz Running @115Mhz FSB = 1.15Ghz
dm-antalus
9.521903 / 20.402187 / 38.640507 fps
Score = 20.411419
Single XP 2000+
dm-antalus
6.744068 / 29.279009 / 61.872112 fps
Score = 29.298101
Dual XP 2000+
dm-antalus
9.435257 / 29.955162 / 64.283737 fps
Score = 29.976755
Single XP 2000+ w/ 1 Seti Command Line Client running w/CPU Priority set to High (100% CPU Utilization)
I wish I had some numbers but the Benchmark didn't even start after 10 minutes... I got impaitent....
Dual XP 2000+ w/ 1 Seti Command Line Client running w/CPU Priority set to High (100% CPU Utilization)
dm-antalus
9.341468 / 29.277737 / 64.079590 fps
Score = 29.299311
I don't know if this proves anything in the real world other than obvious creamy SMP goodness.
I did run all of the benchmarks for single and dual XP (w/o seti) and I found my scores higher if only slightly when running duals. I didn't experience the Dual CPU performance Hit I often see mentioned.
Rig:
Geforce2 GTS-V running at 215/330
Dual XP 2000's
1GB Crucial PC2100 ECC REG DDR (4x 256MB)
Tyan Tiger MP S2460
WinXP Pro