if you're running xp -- for all intensive purposes, it should be the same
the extra 128k cache almost makes up for the 150mhz difference
if you're overclocking however -- the celeron might end up going higher -- if you've got good enough cooling 1000mhz shouldnt be out of the question
the p3 should top out at around 850mhz or so
definately the PIII I used to tell customers the real speed of a celeron was take what ever they say on the label, multiply it by 0 and add 500, thats how you get the real speed.
Originally posted by: Quasmo
definately the PIII I used to tell customers the real speed of a celeron was take what ever they say on the label, multiply it by 0 and add 500, thats how you get the real speed.
Either way, it's very close. When the Coppermine Celerons first came out they were popular as value overclockers. They were cheap and you could easily get 800-850Mhz out of them. A few overclocking articles said you could expect about the same performance as a PIII 650Mhz.
It's extremely close. I couldn't find exact benchmarks, but here's a helpful table. In a synthetic analysis, the A Celeron 566 overclocked to 782 MHz performs almost identically to a PIII-650/100. The edge seems to go to the Celeron, here, but remember that's just one test, and it's not even real-world.
As for overclocking, who knows? My guess is that the Celeron might have more headroom, but I think the 650 was the bottom end of the spectrum of PIIIEs.
the p3 650 should be able to overclock to 866+ pretty easily if you are into that. back in the day, the "hottest" chip on the market for OC'ing was the p3 700 - which would go to 933 without a problem.
At stock the Celeron is probably just a little faster.
Most of the awful performance reputation of the Celeron came from the 66 MHz FSB parts uo to the 766. Slow FSB + half cache = dog. That, and the first couple of generations of crippled P4 celerons.
This is a 100 FSB part so the cache hurts it some (at least 10%) but there is no FSB hit.
by today's standard their both slow as turtle, so who cares? Athlon at 1.7ghz smokes either of them, and it's pretty old. That's my slowest computer, I would not tolerate anything slower.
While not the most reliable of sources, FiringSquad gives the following overclocking potentials: 1072 MHz for the Celeron 800, or 866 MHz for the PIII 650E. So, again, the performance gap is extremely small, but seems to be slightly in favor of the PIII.
So, once more, we can safely say that at stock speeds the Celeron is the best choice, but if you're overclocking the PIII probably makes more sense.
Tough call. I'd normally say PIII in a thread like this, but because the 800 Celeron was the first to have 100MHz FSB, they are alright performers. The only difference is in the cache, BUT the Celeron does had a 150MHz advantage... man, I bet it just depends on the app. I'd love to see some benches on the 2.. I bet it's close.
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