- Aug 25, 2001
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Just came across this review (http://xtreview.com/review188.htm), showing a comparison between a stock E4300, and a Conroe-L OC'ed to 3.0Ghz. Also compares the stock Conroe-L (2.0Ghz) against a Celeron 365 (3.6Ghz).
The Conroe-L spanked the Celly 365 in most things, and it's a cooler-running CPU to boot. So it's a win there. But compare the 3.0Ghz Conroe-L to the stock E4300, and things are a very different story. It seems that the CPU scaling of the C2D design is very cache-dependent, because the dual-core E4300 (2MB L2) at stock (1.8Ghz) wallops the Conroe-L single-core (512KB L2) at 3.0Ghz, even in apps that aren't multithreaded. (Like UT2004.)
So if you are interested in OC'ed performance, it seems clear that one would want to purchase an E4xxx CPU over a Conroe-L anyday. Even if you can get the Conroe-L to high clock speeds, it still doesn't really compare.
But if you have appplications in which a Celeron-D would suffice, then substituting a Conroe-L where possible will save on power and cooling costs.
The Conroe-L spanked the Celly 365 in most things, and it's a cooler-running CPU to boot. So it's a win there. But compare the 3.0Ghz Conroe-L to the stock E4300, and things are a very different story. It seems that the CPU scaling of the C2D design is very cache-dependent, because the dual-core E4300 (2MB L2) at stock (1.8Ghz) wallops the Conroe-L single-core (512KB L2) at 3.0Ghz, even in apps that aren't multithreaded. (Like UT2004.)
So if you are interested in OC'ed performance, it seems clear that one would want to purchase an E4xxx CPU over a Conroe-L anyday. Even if you can get the Conroe-L to high clock speeds, it still doesn't really compare.
But if you have appplications in which a Celeron-D would suffice, then substituting a Conroe-L where possible will save on power and cooling costs.