• We’re currently investigating an issue related to the forum theme and styling that is impacting page layout and visual formatting. The problem has been identified, and we are actively working on a resolution. There is no impact to user data or functionality, this is strictly a front-end display issue. We’ll post an update once the fix has been deployed. Thanks for your patience while we get this sorted.

Retail or OEM cpu

Like Losty said, retail includes a stock HSF. As far as hardware quality of the processors themselves, retail and OEM are identical.
 
as far as overclockin they are about the same.
but I think retail sometimes are built better depending on the manufacturer/factory location
 
I dunno, I've had REALLY BAD LUCK with OEM cpus. 4 out of 4 OEM-Celeron366's wouldn't hit 550. 4 out of 6 Retail Celeron366's did 550 at stock voltage. I know this isn't enough for numerical scientific proof, but it is enough for me to go retail.

FWIW - 5 out of 5 retail 700E's hit 933mhz. Only one of them would not go over 1000mhz. I say retail all the way for maximum overclockability, an extra fan to put on your chipset, and a 3 year warranty.
 
I always go OEM for CPU's. And although I tend to use far more AMD chips than Intel my preference holds for both. I just can't see paying a premium for a "stock" heatsink and fan when there are so many superior alternatives. And, for me at least, longer warranties are moot; I upgrade chips too quickly.
 
All my CPU are OEM and they all have been very reliable. I have heard in the past that OEM CPU from Intel are seconds, that is why they only carry the one year warranty, but hell I haven't have any probs. Oh yeah the HSF too.
 
What brand of hsf is coming with Tbird retail version? Is it taisol?
What's the street price of the same hsf?
Thanks.
 
My OEM Cel566 hit 850 @ stock Voltage and is rock solid stable, the retail 566 I got would only hit 850 @ 1.90V and still was not stable.

OEM PIII600 hit 800 @ stock voltage
OEM Cel366 hit 550 @ stock voltage

I'm 0-1 Retail and 3-3 OEM
 
Yeah, think it's mainly luck that separates the overclockability of OEM and retail chips.
So if u're planning to o/c probably best to go for OEM since u're not paying for the crap intel hsf and can get ur kick arse hsf with a total cost less than the retail cpus.
 
The difference for AMD products is:
Retail = 3 year AMD warranty
OEM = No AMD warranty (only what retailer will give you - usu. 15-60 days)
 
Back
Top