emu34b wrote on 2025-03-20, 21:03:
Depending on your board, you might be able to mod a 771 Xeon into it, usually for cheaper than the equivalent on Core 2. I've seen premodded CPUs with notches cut out and the tape applied to the pads before, and I myself own an E5450 with such a mod. L and E series here is usually more power efficient, produces less heat.
It's also kind of trivial to mod a Q6600 (probably works on Q6700 as well) to run at 3+ ghz with an appropriate board (that supports 1333 Mhz FSB) with a bit of tape over 2 pins and some appropriate RAM. Might suggest you get yourself a 775 board with DDR3, if only because it's easier and cheaper to find slow old DDR3 than fast DDR2.
Bear in mind Core 2, in the context of gaming on XP, is still really quite fast (both single and multicore) even without an overclock.
cyclone3d wrote on 2025-03-21, 02:53:
It is easier to mod the CPU socket than the CPU when doing a 771-775 mod. Just use an exact knife and cut the nubs off instead of filing the board on the CPU.
The stickers to swap the pads on the CPU around work great.
For locked CPUs, it is better to get a lower FSB one with a higher multiplier though it doesn't matter as much if you are pushing the fsb to the stratosphere, which is actually not hard to do on a good board.
Modding is beyond the scope of my intent. I'm alredy pretty happy with my lanparty DK P45. Yes, it's DDR2, but it's not like I'm gonna play games later than 2008/2009 on it. Got it to 333mhz FBS with the Q6600 (Go) without having to do any kind of overvolt, all nice and cool. I haven't tested it up to 400 (since it has a strap for 400mhz fsb), but I'm now pretty confident I could achieve it with little overvolt on the NB/SB and the CPU. And still keep it on the cool side.
And the Corsair kit I got also it's pretty stable. I'm currently running it at 667mhz, but it's rated for 800 4-4-4-12 at 2.1 volt. And I tested it at those rated values. And it sure works.
kagura1050 wrote on 2025-03-21, 03:50:
I used to be into overclocking on the LGA775 platform. In my opinion, for this purpose ASUS It is better to use mobo (preferably X38/48 DDR3) and E8500 (E8600 is too expensive in most cases, but E8500 is not. Also, even if you have a limited budget, it is better to avoid Q8xxx/E7xxx, because the TIM of these is grease. There have been cases of Lynnfield not being able to withstand the rated clock due to TIM deterioration, so these will also have the same fate).
I've overclocked more than 10 E8500s on 4 different motherboards (P5B, P5B deluxe, P5E3 Deluxe, GA-EP45-DQ6), and all of them ran at 4.5GHz (474*9.5)@1.55V. I remember the single-threaded score on CBR15 was around 120cb, which beats Sandy Bridge. It's probably good enough.
From experience, DDR2 mobos tend to struggle to stabilize above 480-490MHz FSB. DDR3 is easily achievable with a cheap stick lying around. It's worth spending a little more to get DDR3.
So 2 cores, right? I have a Lanparty DK P45, a DDR2 mobo that has a strap for 400mhz fsb, and officially supports up to 333. I'm alredy pushing the Q6600 to 333 without overvolts (Go), and I'm pretty confident it will hit a stable 400 with a CPU that has a stock 333 FSB, just with a little overvolt.
I've read reviews of the times, and this MOBO while being on the cheaper side, it was the cheaper side of the OC oriented MOBOs, and they read pretty good.
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But, overall, this thread isn't for discussing OCing, we can do that on the system thread I've opened a month ago or so. I opened this one to resolve another doubt once and for all: What games from the XP era (2001/2006) do like? Fast single core performances or multicore performances.
Becase I don't care about building the fastest XP system possible (otherwise I would've got a much recent platform), I care about maxing out the platform I alredy have for the target software. In this case games not older than 2008. After that, I can easily go with Windows 7 without compatibility issues.
And older threads from both this forum and the internet (even 2008 discussion threads) have given me conflicting answers, with some saying to go for the fasterst single core performances you can get, and others saying to go with as many cores as you can get away with.
Now, just like I said in the thread, I feel (from bench data), that even with the Q6600 running at 3.0GHz I'm still CPU limited. I've put an HD6970 in it (wanted to keep it a surprise 'till I showed it in the other thread), and I can blast it at 1280x1024 with AA no problems, except when there's lot's of stuff going on on the screen, then GPU utilization drops. Something isn't feeding the GPU fast enough, and I think it's the CPU. That's why I'm looking for answers: I need to decide wich CPU to get as an upgrade. The fastet 4 core or the fastest 2 core I can put on a LGA 775.