Originally posted by: Dravic
Got mine from newegg yesterday. So far i couldn't have asked for a better final upgrade piece for this rig.
asus a8n-3
x2 4800+ @ 3.0G 250x12
1.48v
coming from x2 3800+ @ 2.6
dual pime95s runnning
idle 40c , 41c
load 65c, 75c
The X2 4200+ (2.2GHz, 512KB L2 per core) is by far the best bang for the buck.Originally posted by: freshspace
I need your help in getting one of these. Which one would you buy, and why?
1. $119 for the 4800+ OEM (newegg)
2. $99 + shipping for the 4400+ (TD)
3. $119 for Opteron 170 from zzf
4. $63.50 for the 4200+ (newegg)
I am concerned by the heat output. Opteron 170 supposedly gets hot when OCed; 4800+ doesn't OC as much as Opteron, but is cooler, and is OEM; 4400+ not sure much about it but it is cheaper with full retail warranty (TD charges shipping, but you get the copper pipe cooler and only 200mhz slower than the 4800+; and 4200+ is nice, but only 512k per core L2 cache. I want 1M per core. Not sure if it will truly be faster, but I feel it is better?! Help!!! I want to buy one of these soon, before they run out. Can someone give me a real life answer? Please, no C2D talk. Thank you.
Not an OC'r or gamer... That makes things tougher.Originally posted by: RossMAN
Which CPU offers the most bang for my buck AMD X2-4800 or Intel E4300 for around $130?
This is for an HTPC and I'll probably pair it with an ATI 2600XT. Also I'm not an OC'er or gamer.
If I was building a full system I would build on the E4300 (or even E4500).
Originally posted by: RossMAN
Which CPU offers the most bang for my buck AMD X2-4800 or Intel E4300 for around $130?
This is for an HTPC and I'll probably pair it with an ATI 2600XT. Also I'm not an OC'er or gamer.
I'd like a CPU which can handle 1080p content and burning DVD's without a sweat.
For now, we're going to recommend that users interested in HTPC setups stick with the tools that can get the job done best no matter what the source material is. The only options for HD video intensive systems today are the Radeon HD 2600 and GeForce 8600 series cards.
Dual Core now makes a big difference in new game performance over single core:Would it be worth it to buy an Athlon X2 now to replace my 3700+? It's about as good as single cores get, and it's got some room to overclock. My memory kinda sucks too (although I have plenty of it). I'm planning on plopping in an 8800 GT in a month or so and upgrading the PSU. Should I just wait until I really need a dual core to game then upgrade to Core 2 Duo/DDR2 (or whatever is good to buy at the time)?
We don't often look at single-core performance given how cheap dual-core CPUs are today, but it's important to look at where we've come from over the past couple of years.
One to two cores gives us an impressive 60% increase in performance on average, if we look back at our first dual-core processor review none of our gaming tests showed any performance increase from one to two cores. From 0 - 60% in two years isn't bad at all.
Originally posted by: RossMAN
Which CPU offers the most bang for my buck AMD X2-4800 or Intel E4300 for around $130?
This is for an HTPC and I'll probably pair it with an ATI 2600XT. Also I'm not an OC'er or gamer.
I'd like a CPU which can handle 1080p content and burning DVD's without a sweat.
Originally posted by: keysplayr2003
Athlon X2 4800 has more bang per buck than an Intel Core 2 Duo E4300 when zero overclocking is involved. The X2 4800 outperforms the E4300 and the X2 4800 can be had for about 30.00 cheaper (Newegg $99.00).
Originally posted by: Blain
Originally posted by: keysplayr2003
Athlon X2 4800 has more bang per buck than an Intel Core 2 Duo E4300 when zero overclocking is involved. The X2 4800 outperforms the E4300 and the X2 4800 can be had for about 30.00 cheaper (Newegg $99.00).
It's assumed that RossMAN was referring to a socket 939 X2 4800+ rather than the $100 AM2 version that Newegg sells.
It was assumed because RossMAN asked in a "Socket 939" thread about an X2 4800+ vs. the E4300.
Newegg doesn't have any "socket 939" X2 4800+ CPU's.
If he indeed was talking about a 939 system, we would be trying to stop him from doing so anyway as we would all tell him to go AM2, for many reasons.. Correct? Got to steer each other in the right direction.
Originally posted by: Old Hippie
If he indeed was talking about a 939 system, we would be trying to stop him from doing so anyway as we would all tell him to go AM2, for many reasons.. Correct? Got to steer each other in the right direction.
Very True. But ya know, after re-reading a little, I'll bet RossMAN didn't know which socket he was talking about either.....Or even that there is a difference! :laugh:
Originally posted by: Old Hippie
If he indeed was talking about a 939 system, we would be trying to stop him from doing so anyway as we would all tell him to go AM2, for many reasons.. Correct? Got to steer each other in the right direction.
Very True. But ya know, after re-reading a little, I'll bet RossMAN didn't know which socket he was talking about either.....Or even that there is a difference! :laugh:
Originally posted by: RossMAN
Originally posted by: Old Hippie
If he indeed was talking about a 939 system, we would be trying to stop him from doing so anyway as we would all tell him to go AM2, for many reasons.. Correct? Got to steer each other in the right direction.
Very True. But ya know, after re-reading a little, I'll bet RossMAN didn't know which socket he was talking about either.....Or even that there is a difference! :laugh:
Sad but true :laugh:
So I want AM2 not S939, right? Which one for around $100? Link?
Originally posted by: Blain
Originally posted by: keysplayr2003
Athlon X2 4800 has more bang per buck than an Intel Core 2 Duo E4300 when zero overclocking is involved. The X2 4800 outperforms the E4300 and the X2 4800 can be had for about 30.00 cheaper (Newegg $99.00).
It's assumed that RossMAN was referring to a socket 939 X2 4800+ rather than the $100 AM2 version that Newegg sells.
It was assumed because RossMAN asked in a "Socket 939" thread about an X2 4800+ vs. the E4300.
Newegg doesn't have any "socket 939" X2 4800+ CPU's.
You might, or might not, want to start at the beginning of this thread. See what happens when you don't come here everyday?$100 for a Socket 939 Athlon X2 4800? For a couple moments there you guys had me excited.
Originally posted by: mejum
The egg has the X2 5000+ for $130 shipped.