- Jan 24, 2006
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I'm thinking to pick up a opteron 170 or a 175. Which cpu would be best for overclocking? Or maybe even a 180 ?
Originally posted by: Puffnstuff
I wouldn't even both with it and move on to something that has a little upgrade life left to it. S939 mb's are scarce, I know I had to hunt one down for my parents last week. If you really want to build and there are any compusa's near you they're clearing them out and actually have a few s939 in stock. That is where I found the bfg nf4ultra mb I got my parents. I would really encourage you to move up to am2 or 775 for a new build.
Originally posted by: Noubourne
165. The mobos do such high FSB that there is no need for the higher multi.
Originally posted by: DarkManX4lf
Originally posted by: Noubourne
165. The mobos do such high FSB that there is no need for the higher multi.
but what if you have value ram ?
Originally posted by: wingless
You'll achieve higher overall performance if your RAM and FSB are synchronous.
Originally posted by: Noubourne
Originally posted by: DarkManX4lf
Originally posted by: Noubourne
165. The mobos do such high FSB that there is no need for the higher multi.
but what if you have value ram ?
Then use a divider.
It's a waste of money to buy a higher Opty, because almost all of them OC to the same speed, and there are no chipset limitations with Nforce 4 that make it more valuable to have a higher multi.
Originally posted by: DarkManX4lf
With the asrock 939dual-sata2 board I can go past 300fsb, but I'm just worried about the ram I'm going to use (kingston value ram)
Originally posted by: wingless
Having a higher Opty makes OC'ing easier. Your 165 has like a 9x multiplier. My 185 has a 13x multiplier. I don't have to screw with my FSB a lot to get clocks out of it like you do. Playing with the FSB and getting your ram and fsb out of sync increases latency enough to notice if you're serious (I admit I have a problem) about performance differences. Having a higher Opty like a 175 makes it a lot easier to overclock without having to mess around with the FSB too much.
Originally posted by: DarkManX4lf
With the asrock 939dual-sata2 board I can go past 300fsb, but I'm just worried about the ram I'm going to use (kingston value ram)
Originally posted by: VirtualLarry
That's amazing. My ASRock Dual-Sata2 only goes to 275FSB. I had to invest in a DFI Infinity NF4 board off of Ebay for my Opty 165, because it needs more than 300FSB to reach its full potential. For that reason alone, I wish I had gone with an Opty 170. I could have used a cheaper mobo then.