- May 11, 2007
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Can someone give me some examples of really cheap budget boards which would be able to OC the E8200 well.
Something in the range of $40 to 80.
Something in the range of $40 to 80.
Originally posted by: x2 3600 rules sazakky
Can someone give me some examples of really cheap budget boards which would be able to OC the E8200 well.
Something in the range of $40 to 80.
Originally posted by: Zap
Forget about both the E8200 and the E2220. Either step up to the E8400 with the extra 1x multiplier for $15 more, or get the E7200 with a 9.5x multiplier and THREE TIMES the cache of the E2220 for $130 shipped.
Originally posted by: RussianSensation
Forget E8200.....
Intel Pentium E2220 Allendale 2.4GHz 1MB - $90
Multiplier of 12 x 333 FSB (any P35 motherboard) = 4.0ghz. Not that you'll reach that with this cpu, but no P35 motherboard will limit the maximum overclock on this processor. How well does it compare to the higher cache and quads?
E2160 @ 3.0ghz Benchmarks
Basically for the $, barely anything comes close. Your videocard will be the bottleneck after this, no question.
Originally posted by: RussianSensation
So you are recommending him to pay $40 extra for cache that has barely any benefit in gaming when his graphics card will bottleneck any core 2 duo cpu at that speed on top of the fact that you'll now have to overclock the mobo beyond 333 FSB (which most can do, but why bother introducing another limiting component if you don't have to?)
Originally posted by: Zap
400MHz has been easy as pie since the P965 chipset, and is a stock speed on the P45 chipset. I've already seen new P45 chipset boards for under $100 shipped. At 400MHz FSB the E7200 will be running at 3.8GHz without overclocking the RAM and the motherboard.
I doubt that the typical Allendale core will hit anywhere near that speed. I've tried overclocking several (I think 5) and the best was around 3.5GHz and most were around 3.2GHz. I think the Wolfdale core will more likely hit higher speeds, while retaining lower temperatures.
Do you really think cache doesn't impact gaming? Anand and Derek seem to think it does. So do some other folk.
So, an extra $40 for... 3X the cache memory, likely 600MHz faster, runs cooler... I think that's good value.
Originally posted by: RussianSensation
Forget E8200.....
Intel Pentium E2220 Allendale 2.4GHz 1MB - $90
Multiplier of 12 x 333 FSB (any P35 motherboard) = 4.0ghz. Not that you'll reach that with this cpu, but no P35 motherboard will limit the maximum overclock on this processor. How well does it compare to the higher cache and quads?
E2160 @ 3.0ghz Benchmarks
Basically for the $, barely anything comes close. Your videocard will be the bottleneck after this, no question.
Originally posted by: RussianSensation
Originally posted by: Zap
400MHz has been easy as pie since the P965 chipset, and is a stock speed on the P45 chipset. I've already seen new P45 chipset boards for under $100 shipped. At 400MHz FSB the E7200 will be running at 3.8GHz without overclocking the RAM and the motherboard.
Fair enough. P45 chipset would be a better choice over P35, assuming you can get it for $10-20 more.
I doubt that the typical Allendale core will hit anywhere near that speed. I've tried overclocking several (I think 5) and the best was around 3.5GHz and most were around 3.2GHz. I think the Wolfdale core will more likely hit higher speeds, while retaining lower temperatures.
I agree with you that E7200 will overclock better. But the OP seems to be running on a very tight budget; hence my recommendation.
Do you really think cache doesn't impact gaming? Anand and Derek seem to think it does. So do some other folk.
I realize that it has an impact, but you are showing:
1) 1024x768 benches (AT link) - rather pointless
2) 1600x1200 benches (Legion) but at 2.4ghz. My point is that at 3.0ghz+, his videocard will be the limiting factor for almost every game and at this point cache is a wash.
So, an extra $40 for... 3X the cache memory, likely 600MHz faster, runs cooler... I think that's good value.
I somewhat agree now, although E7300 would completely seal the deal (or E7200 at $113). If OP intends to keep it for a while, that little $40 does provide reasonable longevity. However, if he is strapped between $40 towards videocard or E7200, I would dump it towards the VC no question.
Originally posted by: aigomorla
Originally posted by: RussianSensation
Forget E8200.....
Intel Pentium E2220 Allendale 2.4GHz 1MB - $90
Multiplier of 12 x 333 FSB (any P35 motherboard) = 4.0ghz. Not that you'll reach that with this cpu, but no P35 motherboard will limit the maximum overclock on this processor. How well does it compare to the higher cache and quads?
E2160 @ 3.0ghz Benchmarks
Basically for the $, barely anything comes close. Your videocard will be the bottleneck after this, no question.
uhhhh with what voltage you gonna get 4ghz with an allendale.
I dont see many 4ghz allendales. Its not easy to get 4ghz on a non 45nm cpu.
Originally posted by: harpoon84
I'm not convinced an E21x0 @ 3GHz is really that much of a step up over a 2.7GHz X2, especially in gaming. Yeah, benchmarks will put it about 20% faster, but I'm not sure if it'll be that 'noticeable' an increase in performance. On the other hand, an E7200 @ 3.8GHz would be a massive step up and would be much more noticeable.
Originally posted by: RussianSensation
Originally posted by: Zap
Forget about both the E8200 and the E2220. Either step up to the E8400 with the extra 1x multiplier for $15 more, or get the E7200 with a 9.5x multiplier and THREE TIMES the cache of the E2220 for $130 shipped.
So you are recommending him to pay $40 extra for cache that has barely any benefit in gaming when his graphics card will bottleneck any core 2 duo cpu at that speed on top of the fact that you'll now have to overclock the mobo beyond 333 FSB (which most can do, but why bother introducing another limiting component if you don't have to?)
Also, E8500 is a complete waste of $$$ at $230 OEM and $270 boxed. For $280 you can get Q9450.