How old is your motherboard, and how many upgrades did you do with it?

VirtualLarry

No Lifer
Aug 25, 2001
56,572
10,208
126
My mobo was purchased in or around 5/2007, and I've upgraded three times on it. Plan on rocking the S775 for a while longer, probably until IB or Haswell.

Tempted to get a 28nm GPU though, if the prices are reasonable.
 

Spikesoldier

Diamond Member
Oct 15, 2001
6,766
0
0
1.5 yrs
1 upgrade i3 530 @ 4.4 -> i5 750 @ 4.0

too bad lga1156 is a dead socket, otherwise i would attempt to stretch it to two on this mainboard.

lga1156 will hold me to IB or BD
 

DaveSimmons

Elite Member
Aug 12, 2001
40,730
670
126
The E8400 CPU in my gaming PC is from July 2008, but the motherboard died last year so I replaced it with a $35 Foxconn G31 that's working great. Besides that I replaced the 4870 with a 560 ti.

It's probably bottlenecked but I can always move it to a sandy bridge build if I make one before the AMD 7xxx / nvidia 6xx come out.
 

bmaverick

Member
Feb 20, 2010
79
0
0
My system is about the age of yours. It's living just fine without replacing anything. My sig shows the details. At one time, it was on the top end. ;P


All too funny. I read my sig after posting here and realized I had upgraded the RAM to 4Gb and the HDD to 1Tb recently.

If I plan to keep the system another 4 or more years, I will up the RAM to 12 or 16Gb. OS64 has advantages. :)
 
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philosofool

Senior member
Nov 3, 2008
283
19
81
I've upgrade my graphics card, added a new hard drive, and will add an SSD in the near future. LGA 1156 is no more, and I don't plan to upgrade my CPU. The HDD I paired with this mobo was actually from my previous AMD Athlon X2 3800+. So is the case. I hope to have this simple, black Spire case until no one used ATX or mATX anymore.
 

eelw

Lifer
Dec 4, 1999
10,228
5,343
136
Had my Asus P6T Deluxe for 2.5 years. Originally had a 920 in it. Upgraded to 970 this past December.
 

lsv

Golden Member
Dec 18, 2009
1,610
0
71
Current rig I've had since Jan 2010, plan on keeping it for at least 2-3 more years. Although I will be moving to 12gigs of ram within a few weeks and a faster video card probably around the time D3 comes out. Also I put it all in the 650D just a month ago.

Most systems will last quite a while :eek:
 

IGemini

Platinum Member
Nov 5, 2010
2,472
2
81
This rig itself has been going since the dawn of Core 2 in summer 2006 when it was an E6600 and a P5W DH Deluxe. The P5Q Deluxe motherboard was updated around October 2009 to allow Yorkfield overclocking the P5W wouldn't do. Since the 2nd motherboard, the video card went from a 4850 to 5770 to the current 6870. Added a solid-state Corsair F115 in addition to the latest video card. The X-Fi predates the build back to my Dell P4 machine.

I won't be making a new system until Ivy Bridge or Haswell.
 
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BoomerD

No Lifer
Feb 26, 2006
65,973
14,367
146
My current motherboard is new...built in November 2010...and it's on its first (and only) revision...(i5-760...no upgrade path)

My LAST motherboard was built in 2005 I think...and had 2 different processors. P4-2.8 and P4-3.06.

I'm hoping the current build will last at least a couple of years.
 

lsv

Golden Member
Dec 18, 2009
1,610
0
71
My current motherboard is new...built in November 2010...and it's on its first (and only) revision...(i5-760...no upgrade path)

My LAST motherboard was built in 2005 I think...and had 2 different processors. P4-2.8 and P4-3.06.

I'm hoping the current build will last at least a couple of years.

Easily a few years. Sometimes you get the itch but then you loo forward to the next full system upgrade and the pants tighten :p
 

Snakecharmed

Junior Member
Jul 14, 2011
14
0
66
I had my last motherboard from 2005–last week and I only made two performance upgrades by choice. It was a Socket A motherboard that I carried over an old AMD Athlon Thunderbird over before upgrading to an Athlon XP-M months later. I later upgraded the RAM from 1GB to 2GB after DDR was obsolete, and I also had to make two other upgrades to replace failed parts—one being the onboard LAN and the other being my video card. I also made countless hard drive upgrades, but those had more to do with improving capacity rather than performance.

Honestly, I cheaped out in virtually every way possible with the last motherboard. It was DOA because I should have done a true new build in 2005 and went Socket 939, but instead, I thought I would be clever by keeping a CPU through a motherboard upgrade and then vice versa a few months later. I've come to realize that all the backwards socket compatibility that AMD likes to maintain isn't necessarily good in the long run because you get tricked into thinking that an incremental upgrade will actually help when most people don't benefit much from it. Thankfully, there haven't been any new frameworks lately like a new instruction set (x86-64), storage interface (SATA), or graphics card slot (PCIe). Those three things came out at around the same time and I got caught on the wrong end of it all.

I don't think it makes sense to do performance upgrades on a motherboard when the upgrade cannot beat obsolescence. That's the position that some Core 2 owners find themselves in now.
 
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mfenn

Elite Member
Jan 17, 2010
22,400
5
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www.mfenn.com
If I plan to keep the system another 4 or more years, I will up the RAM to 12 or 16Gb. OS64 has advantages. :)

I think you'll have a hard time finding a 939 mobo that supports 4GB DIMMs or the memory to go in it.

As for me, my 1156 mobo was bought in Feb 2010 and I don't plan to change from the original CPU (i7 860). I have upgraded the GPU though.