Originally posted by: welst10
Actaully dell does sell prescott, tho I don't know how many they sell. My dell 8300 (bought it in late Feb) has got a prescott 3.0Ghz. It has a JMC/DATECH 92x92x38 fan (123 CFM 58dBA). Pretty loud, but so far no instability problems.
Originally posted by: AIWGuru
Originally posted by: welst10
Actaully dell does sell prescott, tho I don't know how many they sell. My dell 8300 (bought it in late Feb) has got a prescott 3.0Ghz. It has a JMC/DATECH 92x92x38 fan (123 CFM 58dBA). Pretty loud, but so far no instability problems.
Yeah, they cancelled all orders from Intel. They're not selling them anymore.
Originally posted by: BFG10K
OCing is beside the point. The point is that Intel guarantees their cooling solution and processor for three years.
If one company offers a guarantee and the other does not, which company do you think has the greater vested interest in designing a reliable cooling solution?
Um, which of those two companies are known for making the best heatsinks money can buy?😕Originally posted by: BFG10K
OCing is beside the point. The point is that Intel guarantees their cooling solution and processor for three years.
If one company offers a guarantee and the other does not, which company do you think has the greater vested interest in designing a reliable cooling solution?
Originally posted by: kd2777
The sp-94 is what I have....and according to the motherboard readings it is a better cooling solution than the intel HSF...At ideal the intel read 65c and just a little into 3dmark it went to 83.5c.
It seems that the only real solution is that maybe my motherboard is reading the wrong temp. I have loved intel produces for years, and it would break my heart to know that they made a product that would get that hot run the way they ment it to be run. I could understand if I was that hot because I was OC it and had the voltage turned up, but I am running it completely stock as I am typing this and it is running 65.5c!!!!!
Who knows maybe for the first time in my life I should underclock it.....maybe Anandtech could start a forum for underclockers...
Thanks
KD
Originally posted by: jdogg707
Originally posted by: kd2777
The sp-94 is what I have....and according to the motherboard readings it is a better cooling solution than the intel HSF...At ideal the intel read 65c and just a little into 3dmark it went to 83.5c.
It seems that the only real solution is that maybe my motherboard is reading the wrong temp. I have loved intel produces for years, and it would break my heart to know that they made a product that would get that hot run the way they ment it to be run. I could understand if I was that hot because I was OC it and had the voltage turned up, but I am running it completely stock as I am typing this and it is running 65.5c!!!!!
Who knows maybe for the first time in my life I should underclock it.....maybe Anandtech could start a forum for underclockers...
Thanks
KD
Abit boards do read temps a little high, but your temps should not be that high. Did you get the Thermal Paste applied properly? I hate to ask but if you added too much it will heat up the chip a good bit. And when you attached the cooler was it making solid contact with the chip? All screws were installed nice and tight? With the SP94, you should see highs of nowhere over 58C or so, as in the reviews I've read it seems the Intel solution was keeping most people under 70C at load.
Buy An Athlon64 and dump that crap.......I don't know what else to do.
Originally posted by: Markfw900
OK, I can't resist:
Buy An Athlon64 and dump that crap.......I don't know what else to do.
Originally posted by: kd2777
Originally posted by: jdogg707
Originally posted by: kd2777
The sp-94 is what I have....and according to the motherboard readings it is a better cooling solution than the intel HSF...At ideal the intel read 65c and just a little into 3dmark it went to 83.5c.
It seems that the only real solution is that maybe my motherboard is reading the wrong temp. I have loved intel produces for years, and it would break my heart to know that they made a product that would get that hot run the way they ment it to be run. I could understand if I was that hot because I was OC it and had the voltage turned up, but I am running it completely stock as I am typing this and it is running 65.5c!!!!!
Who knows maybe for the first time in my life I should underclock it.....maybe Anandtech could start a forum for underclockers...
Thanks
KD
Abit boards do read temps a little high, but your temps should not be that high. Did you get the Thermal Paste applied properly? I hate to ask but if you added too much it will heat up the chip a good bit. And when you attached the cooler was it making solid contact with the chip? All screws were installed nice and tight? With the SP94, you should see highs of nowhere over 58C or so, as in the reviews I've read it seems the Intel solution was keeping most people under 70C at load.
Yes. To my best knowledge the paste is being put on right. I but a dab on the cpu then spred it real thin over it with my debit card. And the HS is making a good solid connection.everything is tight. I don't know what else to do.
Odd. My uncle just purchased a Dell 8300 and it came with a 3.0Ghz Prescott. Where did you get this information from? It's also still being sold in their Precision 360 Workstations.Yeah, they cancelled all orders from Intel. They're not selling them anymore.
Originally posted by: mikecel79
Odd. My uncle just purchased a Dell 8300 and it came with a 3.0Ghz Prescott. Where did you get this information from? It's also still being sold in their Precision 360 Workstations.Yeah, they cancelled all orders from Intel. They're not selling them anymore.
It's all about supply and demand. The demand for high end chips is pretty incredible right now.Originally posted by: jdogg707
Originally posted by: mikecel79
Odd. My uncle just purchased a Dell 8300 and it came with a 3.0Ghz Prescott. Where did you get this information from? It's also still being sold in their Precision 360 Workstations.Yeah, they cancelled all orders from Intel. They're not selling them anymore.
I heard the same problems that Dell was having a problem keeping the Prescott cool, so they are waiting for the new revision before implementing them again. Of course ZDNet says it may have been caused by a shortage, who knows? I know someone on here was having a problem with an 8300 they got because it was overheating.