da loser

Platinum Member
Oct 9, 1999
2,037
0
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why not get one from tcwo for $199 SlotA 750, everyone at amdzone has been getting 900 cores. plus it looks like these guy test the cpus first, so i wouldn't buy from them.
 

CaptainCaveman

Junior Member
Jul 12, 2000
6
0
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I thought I read that Thunderbirds were Socket A only...?

All the reviews I've been reading have said all Thunderbirds and Durons work in the same motherboards. Hmmm. And they don't have pictures of the Slot A Thunderbirds...

Am I misinformed or is this shady.. :) ?
 

kendogg

Diamond Member
Oct 10, 1999
3,824
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CaptainCaveman

you are correct they come in sockets and slots. I just heard that the slots were limited in quantity.
 

Linc

Junior Member
Jul 16, 2000
9
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Slot-A was produced for backward compatibility, for the OEM companies (Gateway, Compaq, HP and so on). They weren't really intended for the open market.

AMD intends for the Socket-A version to be mass market product. So you're thinking, I should just get socket-a Mobo/CPU and I'm covered for future upgrades. Well, here's the kicker...Socket CPUs are LOCKED and unless you've got micro-soldering experience (like the guys at TomsHardware.com) there's NO overclocking them (not even with multiplier dip switches on Mobos).

So, if you want to be able to overclock...then go slot-a
If you want future upgradability, socket-a is the platform.

Lovely.
 

Quickfingerz

Diamond Member
Jan 18, 2000
3,176
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If you know how to make your own slockets, you can make your own slocket overclocking device and make lots of money. or socket to socket overclocking device. I would think that it's pretty easy.
 

bomb99

Golden Member
Oct 12, 1999
1,565
0
0
will this slot A work with my giga byte k7ix motherboard? can i stil overclock them?