You are aware of the fact there are no overclocking features on H67 boards whatsoever? Edit: have to correct myself a bit here: you can overclock the igp (yey?) and I'm also not completely certain about whether you can use the extra turbo bins or not (first I read you couldn't, later someone claimed you could). But the unlocked multiplier on the K models is locked.
Is the intel's P67 mobo good or get the asus P8P67 mobo ?
Its a shame that the P67 boards don't tend to support the video. It actually sounds quite good. Certainly quite a step up above the embedded HD4250/HD3300 on the AMD 890GX/790GX chipsets.
Summary for the new guy:
H67 = Integrated Graphics processor support and no CPU overclocking
P67 = No IGP support but CPU overclocking
If this is correct then I think I want the H67 for my needs
(Integrated graphics and no overclocking)
Correct. However I would still get the P67 and then use a cheap discrete card. I just don't see any point of running these chips at stock.
Hey, another beginner here...
I'm buying a new computer and I'm trying to get a very decent gaming machine for as little as possible.
1) Can I use H67 instead of P67 with this setup and if yes would it decrease the performance of the computer in any way if I never plan to overclock?
2) Is overclocking simple enough to achieve
Quick answers:
1) If you never overclock there is no difference between H67 and P67. A 2500 will run at the same speed on both.
get it for resale value.
This is mostly but not entirely true, since P67 users get screwed out of the Quick Sync feature, which is a huge win if you do a lot of video transcoding. If you don't plan to overclock, this could be a reason to prefer H67. Right now you still have to jump through hoops to use Quick Sync if you are installing a discrete GPU on H67, but there's some software in development that may fix that.
I've been researching Sandy Bridge and this whole situation irritates the hell out of me, I was thinking about getting my first Intel chip in years but I may just say the heck with it and go AMD again.
Correct. However I would still get the P67 and then use a cheap discrete card. I just don't see any point of running these chips at stock.