A highly overclocked X5650 has about same single thread perf. as a 3770. In multi-thread, it slaughters even a 4790K.
Slaughters seems a little excessive. At the same clocks a Westmere hex core will still be faster than a 4770k/4790k in something like Cinebench, but not by a huge amount. Your X5650 in the 11.5 thread @ 4.87GHz scored 12% higher than Udgmin's 4770k @4.8GHz, but that's not really slaughtered territory.
Anytime you want to upgrade, just drop a hexcore Xeon in your rig and sell the I7-920. The Westmere Xeons are 32nm instead of 45nm and use less power compared to the 920. They also overclock very well, and a cheap Xeon X5650 at >4.3Ghz, will mostly best a 4790K (except single thread).
http://www.ebay.com/itm/Intel-Xeon-...789874?hash=item3abc45bbf2:g:kNIAAOSwLnlWprUb
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Actually there are some Dell X58 boards that overclock well still available cheap. You do have to Flash them with Alienware bios, but they're solid boards that work well (once flashed). You could do what you're thinking with the I7-920
http://www.ebay.com/itm/151586313094?_trksid=p2055119.m1438.l2649&ssPageName=STRK:MEBIDX:IT
http://www.ebay.com/itm/Genuine-Del...rd-P270J-0P270J-MS-7543-Original/231819372777
Same OEM (MSI) board used in the Alienware Area 51 system from that era.
http://www.notebookparts.com/dell-a...sDRIt0UOYWZjwYYbODdMMb-vUCamjD6-CyxoCmU3w_wcB
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OG dually i5 in my lappy is still plenty for basic needs and light gaming, could probably take on heavier games were it not held back by a Radeon 5470. Heck, even without GPU assist in HTML5, it still has the uumph to drive 1080P playback in Youtube without frame drops.Glad to see a few guys out there still using the OG i7 line of CPU's and happy with them. I believe they are a great CPU and still hold there own in today's real world for most situations. Anyone else care to share?
Well I don't know whether to thank you or hate you but I ordered a Xeon X5650 this morning. Found a deal on eBay I couldn't pass up so I snagged it. I probably won't go too crazy on OC'ing this one, maybe stick around 3ghz or so (I probably don't even need that). I see 920's aren't going for too much on eBay but maybe I'll throw it on there anyway to make a few bucks back. Thought about investing in another motherboard and upgrading my home server from my Core 2 Quad to the 920 but the cost of motherboard and 3 sticks of DDR3 shut that down. So now I get to await the arrival of my first 6-core CPU and see what she can do. Thanks again for the heads up on this.
Good luck with it. If you're happy around 3GHz you shouldn't have too much trouble with it. I upgraded my 920 to a 5650 a few months ago and even at 3.4 it's not technically stable (I've had 2 BSODs at idle since I got it). But if you're not planning to OC it much anyway, at least you get the power savings.
Then your settings are wrong. The Xeon is a much more capable cpu than the i7-920, especially when overclocked. They overclock very easily if you have a decent board & know how to set it up.
I hate you, go away!
It's a good idea and thank you for sharing but I need to slow down on the spending front. Not only is my honeymoon coming up but if I'm going to keep investing $70 and $80 here and there, I might as well rebuild my current system's core (CPU/Mobo/RAM) and re-purpose my soon to be 6 core setup to server duty (which would be excessive overkill). $70 to upgrade to a hexacore setup and extend the life of my system was money well spent but beyond that I don't see any other viable upgrades until something groundbreaking comes out.
Has a bit of a learning curve, they do not overclock the same way.
The HTPC I stuck my X5650 in is @ 3.8, and I consider that light as it was higher when it was in the main rig.
This thread inspired me to buy an i7-860 to upgrade from an i5-750. To be honest, the 750 can still hold its own. The 860 was $70 shipped on which is an impulse buy.
