Originally posted by: stevty2889
Well it would depend alot on what you do with your computer, and how much you want to spend on cooling. My pentium-d 805 still hits 57c @3.7ghz on water cooling, stock cooling isn't gonna get you far. But being a dual core, it would do better at SMP aware apps and heavy cpu intensive multitasking than the single core opty. If gaming is your main concern, and high temps bother you I'd go with the opty.
Originally posted by: 996GT2
Originally posted by: stevty2889
Well it would depend alot on what you do with your computer, and how much you want to spend on cooling. My pentium-d 805 still hits 57c @3.7ghz on water cooling, stock cooling isn't gonna get you far. But being a dual core, it would do better at SMP aware apps and heavy cpu intensive multitasking than the single core opty. If gaming is your main concern, and high temps bother you I'd go with the opty.
Agreed...Although if you get the 805 now you may have an easier time if you choose to upgrade to Conroe later, as your motherboard may still be compatible
Originally posted by: Bull Dog
Originally posted by: 996GT2
Originally posted by: stevty2889
Well it would depend alot on what you do with your computer, and how much you want to spend on cooling. My pentium-d 805 still hits 57c @3.7ghz on water cooling, stock cooling isn't gonna get you far. But being a dual core, it would do better at SMP aware apps and heavy cpu intensive multitasking than the single core opty. If gaming is your main concern, and high temps bother you I'd go with the opty.
Agreed...Although if you get the 805 now you may have an easier time if you choose to upgrade to Conroe later, as your motherboard may still be compatible
The mobo won't be compatiable with Conroe so that reason is now NULL.