The best chip on the market is Sandy Bridge, for per-clock performance. Overclocking your 920 is a good idea, but won't put you within striking distance of the 2500K. The 2500K is essentially a 4.2Ghz chip (ie. it runs that speed with stock voltage). At stock settings, the 2500K is like an 8-core Phenom 920, you'd have to overclock your 920 to 5Ghz to match, and that isn't realistic. So just get the 2500K. Your 920 will still sell well.
At stock speeds, with similar video cards you'll see a decent framerate increase moving to the 2500K.
All that said, your 920 would still push a better video card, so you may want to try a new GPU first.
The 2500k with a solid Z-MB is a great choice. You can get a decent OC from the stock fan, or if you want a better OC on a budget, the Cooler Master Hyper 212 is a great deal for ~$20. 4.2ghz+ is very easy on these chips.
My suggestion: read up on overclocking a bit more, it sounds to me like you aren't reducing your RAM ratios correctly and that's causing your instability. OC your PhII 920 to >3GHz (free upgrade) and then spend some of your cash on a new GPU (GTX 560 Ti 448-core or HD 6970 likely best choices today). If that doesn't fix your gaming experience, in a few months Ivy Bridge is supposed to launch, same performance as today's Sandy Bridge chips at lower power consumption.
Welcome the board and welcome to the Intel® Family. I think you are going to be very happy with the Intel Core® i5-2500K and with a good Z68 board you are find a whole new world of performance upping up for you.
One problem though, my ram was rated stock @ 4-4-4-12. But came out of the package at 5-5-5-12? All I did was go into the bios to change it back to what it was supposed to come as.
You understand the basics of overclocking, right? On your chip the multiplier is locked so you have to increase the fsb to make the cpu operate at a higher speed. Thing is, RAM speed (among other things) is also based on fsb speed so if you don't lower your RAM multiplier you can easily push it above its tolerance and run into instability.
Excellent guide here: http://forums.guru3d.com/showthread.php?t=267708
Note that the PhII Black series and the K-series chips from Intel are multiplier unlocked meaning you simply turn up the multiplier on the cpu itself without affecting any other components.
5-600 $ might not get everything you want/need on a 2500k build. What can you salvage and/or part out? Willing to put up with ebay-ing some old parts to offset costs?
You also have some room to improve current setup for alot less. The phenom in my sig sells at microcenter for $50.- I grabbed a 5870 off bens outlet last night for $140 shipped. Less than $200 not including anything you might get off ebay for old parts.
A few questions, could I use that 1866 Ram at that speed with that processor? and would this be a big upgrade from my current system? thanks. Cyrus9008 is offline Report Post
If you're having trouble overclocking then don't get the 2500k, but a regular sb chip then.
Don't worry about 1866mhz ram you get a stunningly small perfomance increase by increasing ram speed with SB. You OC with the multiplier and the bclock stays at 100 so any decent branded RAM is fine. Also take the advice of people here and go for the 2500. If you mainly want this for gaming you will be wasting money "upgrading" to the I7 and will see very little benefit for it. Hell if you pick up a decent deal you might even be most of the way towards a new GPU with your $600 limit.
Hey everyone, I am currently debating whether I should make the transition from AMD to Intel. I need some help whether or not I should do this. I use my computer for alot of gaming applications.
I am running an AMD Phenom II x4 920 @ 2.8GHz with 6gb of Patriot DDR2 6400 and a AMD 4890 GFX card.
For days now I have been making different combos or the FX series chips more specifically the 4 core one not the 8. But I have read many places on the internet that said it would not be worth the upgrade to do that. So I then looked at the 8 core cpus but I have been reading that the whole FX series is a bit flawed so far. I am on a bit of a budget meaning I can't spend 1000 on an intel chip either.
I don't really know anything about intel and I have been reading all the info I can but am running into trouble deciding if an upgrade from my current system would be worth it considering my budget. What would be a good combination of a CPU/MOBO/RAM I could buy that's intel that won't break the bank(CPU must be no less than 4 cores and no less than 8gb of RAM), but will greatly outperform my current system. Also I am currently not looking for a new video card, that's going to come later. I am willing to spend around ~5-6 hundred dollars
Thanks guys
You already have a quad core, and your video card goes perfect with it. If you get a new Sandy your going to be bottlenecked unless you buy a new video card. Stick with what you have,, I bet you never used all CPU usage,, hang in there,, wait for Haswell 2013 , and the 23.fps bug fixed finally! and 22nm 6Ghz wow,,
Definitely NOT going to go with a stock fan hahaha. I was looking at coolers last night and decided on ZALMAN CNPS7X LED 92mm.
That's not a great HSF. You would get much better performance from a Cooler Master Hyper 212+ for less money.Definitely NOT going to go with a stock fan hahaha. I was looking at coolers last night and decided on ZALMAN CNPS7X LED 92mm.
http://www.newegg.com/Product/Produc...82E16835103065
or the new Evo version for $5 more:
http://www.newegg.com/Product/Produc...82E16835103099
Welcome the board and welcome to the Intel® Family. I think you are going to be very happy with the Intel Core® i5-2500K and with a good Z68 board you are find a whole new world of performance upping up for you.
These are good options for new cases. If you insist on using an old case that's not big enough to support a 120mm fan, like I do, then I suggest a Xigmatek Loki, like the one I have. Just $9 AR!!!
[as Marlon Brando] Don't ever disrespect the family, Cyrus.