Originally posted by: mrfatboy
I will be getting a q6600 in july paired with a P35 board. I will be doing light overclock. Will the stock fan be enough? If not, what aftermarket fan should I get. Also, does the q6600 come with its own thermal paste or should I get something like Arctic 5?
Originally posted by: mrfatboy
I am building a system that will hopefully last me several years. I was going to get a e6600 but when I saw the price cuts in July I thought why not a Q6600. I'm just gaming, internet, email, sketchup, word, excel, dvd burning, etc. I want emphasis on reliability and will only tinker with overclocking until I feel it's not worth it. My system will be running 24/7.
Thanks for the comments. That is great info. I certainly don't want to deal with a water cooled sytem. I'm not that extreme.
Would it be better to get an Q6600 and not overclock then an E6600 with a mild overclock? Again, realiability and future proofness would be key.
Originally posted by: aigomorla
idontknow <--- has the fastest quad on this forum to date.
Originally posted by: myocardia
Originally posted by: aigomorla
idontknow <--- has the fastest quad on this forum to date.
No, no, no; Yoxxy ran his QX6700 @ >4 Ghz for quite awhile. If I remember correctly, at that time, he was running his QX6700 @ 4.2 Ghz, and his X6800 @ 4.4 Ghz. He's since dropped them down to more reasonable levels. Everything else you said was right on the money, though, except for the "professionally overclock".😀
Originally posted by: cbuchach
Still I would look at the Anandtech heatsinck comparison. The Thermalright Ultra 120 or improved Ultra 120 should be your best bet. I have the original Ulta 120 and it cools my E6600 at 3500 very well. The Quad will run hotter but still reasonable.
Yeah, he clocked them both back. IIRC, he actually burned out the phase change unit he had on the QX6700, trying to keep it cool; I have a bad memory, though, so don't take my word for why he clocked them both back.😉Originally posted by: aigomorla
blah... yeah i know yoxxy was running them that fast. but i think he throttled them down no?
I'm pretty sure that most of us understood what you meant. It was still funny, though. And you're correct, "expert" is the proper word, in that scenario.and i dont know what else to say about the professional part. ummm.. maybe expert? I was more trying to cut the 75% who dont know jack about quadcores, from imputing wrong info to this guy.
Originally posted by: adairusmc
I was wondering sort of the same thing myself. I want to upgrade my E6600 to a Q6600 after the price cut, and I was just wondering if a Zalman CNPS9500 would cut it for stock voltages and no overclocking? I have one of those already set up on my E6600, and was just curious if I could get away with using it without having to remove the motherboard and removing the bracket.
Originally posted by: aigomorla
Originally posted by: adairusmc
I was wondering sort of the same thing myself. I want to upgrade my E6600 to a Q6600 after the price cut, and I was just wondering if a Zalman CNPS9500 would cut it for stock voltages and no overclocking? I have one of those already set up on my E6600, and was just curious if I could get away with using it without having to remove the motherboard and removing the bracket.
with no overclocking sure.
U wont get super temps tho. But it will work.
While the 9500 isn't the best heatsink around, it will still be drastically better than the stock heatsink would be, so you'll be fine with it at stock speeds.Originally posted by: adairusmc
I want to upgrade my E6600 to a Q6600 after the price cut, and I was just wondering if a Zalman CNPS9500 would cut it for stock voltages and no overclocking?
The Zalman 9700 cools considerably better than the 9500, and it will fit anywhere that a 9500 will fit. You still won't be able to run a quad @ 3.2 Ghz with it, though. 2.8-3.0 should be alright, I would think, as long as you aren't anal about temps, like I am.:laugh:The CNPS9500 is a good fit inside this case - and I've seen many people use them before (although admittedly not with a quad).
I was really banking that the 9500 would be sufficient to OC the Q6600 up to 3.2ghz for regular usage. (Unless someone knows another SFF-friendly cooler up to the job)
Originally posted by: myocardia
Yeah, he clocked them both back. IIRC, he actually burned out the phase change unit he had on the QX6700, trying to keep it cool; I have a bad memory, though, so don't take my word for why he clocked them both back.😉Originally posted by: aigomorla
blah... yeah i know yoxxy was running them that fast. but i think he throttled them down no?
I'm pretty sure that most of us understood what you meant. It was still funny, though. And you're correct, "expert" is the proper word, in that scenario.and i dont know what else to say about the professional part. ummm.. maybe expert? I was more trying to cut the 75% who dont know jack about quadcores, from imputing wrong info to this guy.