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Faster chip? (Read 681 times)
Mar 28th, 2010 at 9:31pm

hhomebrewer   Offline
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Is there a faster chip in an AM2+ design than the 2200MHz of the Agena Phenom 9500 X4 I'm using now? I'd like to upgrade if I can, without having to go to a new motherboard. If I there is no faster chip, I'm looking at a new motherboard and chip that can handle 125 watts. The Agena is 65 watts. Thanks to all you hardware geniuses out there. I appreciate the help.
 

I am homebrewer. I had 633 posts when for some unknown reason, my account disappeared...
AMD Phenom II X4 940 (Deneb), Asus M3N72-D motherboard, 2 x nVidia 8800GTS @640MB RAM, 1 x Seagate Barracuda 500Gb HDD (storage), 1 x Western Digital Black 250Gb HDD (boot), 12Gb 800Mhz G.Skill RAM (5-5-5-18), 2x Sony DVD writers, 28-inch ViewSonic monitor given to me by my computer guru, FS2004, Windows 7 Professional (64-bit), 850-watt Thermaltake modular p/s, 7 x 120mm fans to cool it...
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Reply #1 - Mar 28th, 2010 at 10:11pm

hhomebrewer   Offline
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I did a bit of looking. Seems the board is limited to 65 watts so No, I can go nowhere. New motherboard and chip time...
 

I am homebrewer. I had 633 posts when for some unknown reason, my account disappeared...
AMD Phenom II X4 940 (Deneb), Asus M3N72-D motherboard, 2 x nVidia 8800GTS @640MB RAM, 1 x Seagate Barracuda 500Gb HDD (storage), 1 x Western Digital Black 250Gb HDD (boot), 12Gb 800Mhz G.Skill RAM (5-5-5-18), 2x Sony DVD writers, 28-inch ViewSonic monitor given to me by my computer guru, FS2004, Windows 7 Professional (64-bit), 850-watt Thermaltake modular p/s, 7 x 120mm fans to cool it...
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Reply #2 - Mar 31st, 2010 at 2:00am

hhomebrewer   Offline
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Further research yields I can install an AMD Phenom II X940 Deneb core at 3.0 GHz into my board. No need to go all that way. The chip is just $155 and goes into the ZIF socket in two shakes. My Zalman will cool it. I'm psyched!
 

I am homebrewer. I had 633 posts when for some unknown reason, my account disappeared...
AMD Phenom II X4 940 (Deneb), Asus M3N72-D motherboard, 2 x nVidia 8800GTS @640MB RAM, 1 x Seagate Barracuda 500Gb HDD (storage), 1 x Western Digital Black 250Gb HDD (boot), 12Gb 800Mhz G.Skill RAM (5-5-5-18), 2x Sony DVD writers, 28-inch ViewSonic monitor given to me by my computer guru, FS2004, Windows 7 Professional (64-bit), 850-watt Thermaltake modular p/s, 7 x 120mm fans to cool it...
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Reply #3 - Mar 31st, 2010 at 6:51am

Fozzer   Offline
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Its always a bit of a problem in obtaining faster Chips, etc!... Roll Eyes...!

My Gigabyte, Socket A, AGP Motherboard, is fitted with an AMD, Socket A, Athlon XP Thoroughbred 2600 MMX (2.1 GHz) Processor, which is the fastest (apparently) Chip available, to fit into the Socket A.

(...and n-Vidia, AGP, 7800GS 256 Graphics...fastest for AGP Sockets).

If I want any more speed now I will have to purchase a new PCI-e Motherboard and Processor, new Graphics Card, and new Memory!

....and start all over again!....$...$...$.... Cry...!

At the moment it suits my FS 2004 (Maxed), and FSX so I will stick with it for a while... Smiley...!

Paul...G-BPLF...FS 2004...FS Nav... Smiley...!
« Last Edit: Mar 31st, 2010 at 12:28pm by Fozzer »  

Dell Dimension 5000 BTX Tower. Win7 Home Edition, 32 Bit. Intel Pentium 4, dual 2.8 GHz. 2.5GB RAM, nVidia GF 9500GT 1GB. SATA 500GB + 80GB. Philips 17" LCD Monitor. Micronet ADSL Modem only. Saitek Cyborg Evo Force. FS 2004 + FSX. Briggs and Stratton Petrol Lawn Mower...Motor Bikes. Gas Cooker... and lots of musical instruments!.... ...!
Yamaha MO6,MM6,DX7,DX11,DX21,DX100,MK100,EMT10,PSR400,PSS780,Roland GW-8L v2,TR505,Casio MT-205,Korg CX3v2 dual manual,+ Leslie 760,M-Audio Prokeys88,KeyRig,Cubase,Keyfax4,Guitars,Orchestral,Baroque,Renaissance,Medieval Instruments.
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Reply #4 - Mar 31st, 2010 at 7:48am

machineman9   Offline
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The Ghz bit is how 'fast' it is, but not how powerful it is. It's like a car going along... If it is going at 5000RPM in first gear, the engine will be running fast, but a car in fifth gear at 4000RPM has the engine going slower, but overall is performing better.

So the Ghz is just how many cycles it does in a second, not how effective the cycles are.


According to cpubenchmark.net, the X940 comes in about 100 places better than your current processor, so if that all works (I am an Intel bloke, so I don't know a huge amount about AMD) then that should give a serious boost.
 

...
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Reply #5 - Mar 31st, 2010 at 7:55am

Fozzer   Offline
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Posts: 24861
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machineman9 wrote on Mar 31st, 2010 at 7:48am:
The Ghz bit is how 'fast' it is, but not how powerful it is. It's like a car going along... If it is going at 5000RPM in first gear, the engine will be running fast, but a car in fifth gear at 4000RPM has the engine going slower, but overall is performing better.

So the Ghz is just how many cycles it does in a second, not how effective the cycles are.


According to cpubenchmark.net, the X940 comes in about 100 places better than your current processor, so if that all works (I am an Intel bloke, so I don't know a huge amount about AMD) then that should give a serious boost.


...and you reckon that a sooper-dooper, high-speed, X940 will fit in my Socket A Gigabyte Motherboard?

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Socket_A

Paul.... Wink... Wink...!
 

Dell Dimension 5000 BTX Tower. Win7 Home Edition, 32 Bit. Intel Pentium 4, dual 2.8 GHz. 2.5GB RAM, nVidia GF 9500GT 1GB. SATA 500GB + 80GB. Philips 17" LCD Monitor. Micronet ADSL Modem only. Saitek Cyborg Evo Force. FS 2004 + FSX. Briggs and Stratton Petrol Lawn Mower...Motor Bikes. Gas Cooker... and lots of musical instruments!.... ...!
Yamaha MO6,MM6,DX7,DX11,DX21,DX100,MK100,EMT10,PSR400,PSS780,Roland GW-8L v2,TR505,Casio MT-205,Korg CX3v2 dual manual,+ Leslie 760,M-Audio Prokeys88,KeyRig,Cubase,Keyfax4,Guitars,Orchestral,Baroque,Renaissance,Medieval Instruments.
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Reply #6 - Mar 31st, 2010 at 8:01am

machineman9   Offline
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Fozzer wrote on Mar 31st, 2010 at 7:55am:
machineman9 wrote on Mar 31st, 2010 at 7:48am:
The Ghz bit is how 'fast' it is, but not how powerful it is. It's like a car going along... If it is going at 5000RPM in first gear, the engine will be running fast, but a car in fifth gear at 4000RPM has the engine going slower, but overall is performing better.

So the Ghz is just how many cycles it does in a second, not how effective the cycles are.


According to cpubenchmark.net, the X940 comes in about 100 places better than your current processor, so if that all works (I am an Intel bloke, so I don't know a huge amount about AMD) then that should give a serious boost.


...and you reckon that a sooper-dooper, high-speed, X940 will fit in my Socket A Gigabyte Motherboard?

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Socket_A

Paul.... Wink... Wink...!

As I said, I am an Intel user, so I know little about AMD sockets.
 

...
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Reply #7 - Mar 31st, 2010 at 8:04am

Fozzer   Offline
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machineman9 wrote on Mar 31st, 2010 at 8:01am:
Fozzer wrote on Mar 31st, 2010 at 7:55am:
machineman9 wrote on Mar 31st, 2010 at 7:48am:
The Ghz bit is how 'fast' it is, but not how powerful it is. It's like a car going along... If it is going at 5000RPM in first gear, the engine will be running fast, but a car in fifth gear at 4000RPM has the engine going slower, but overall is performing better.

So the Ghz is just how many cycles it does in a second, not how effective the cycles are.


According to cpubenchmark.net, the X940 comes in about 100 places better than your current processor, so if that all works (I am an Intel bloke, so I don't know a huge amount about AMD) then that should give a serious boost.


...and you reckon that a sooper-dooper, high-speed, X940 will fit in my Socket A Gigabyte Motherboard?

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Socket_A

Paul.... Wink... Wink...!

As I said, I am an Intel user, so I know little about AMD sockets.


Exactly what I was thinking...
I gave the full specification  of my system in the first Post...

Socket A Motherboard, and Socket A, AMD Processor.

Paul.
 

Dell Dimension 5000 BTX Tower. Win7 Home Edition, 32 Bit. Intel Pentium 4, dual 2.8 GHz. 2.5GB RAM, nVidia GF 9500GT 1GB. SATA 500GB + 80GB. Philips 17" LCD Monitor. Micronet ADSL Modem only. Saitek Cyborg Evo Force. FS 2004 + FSX. Briggs and Stratton Petrol Lawn Mower...Motor Bikes. Gas Cooker... and lots of musical instruments!.... ...!
Yamaha MO6,MM6,DX7,DX11,DX21,DX100,MK100,EMT10,PSR400,PSS780,Roland GW-8L v2,TR505,Casio MT-205,Korg CX3v2 dual manual,+ Leslie 760,M-Audio Prokeys88,KeyRig,Cubase,Keyfax4,Guitars,Orchestral,Baroque,Renaissance,Medieval Instruments.
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Reply #8 - Mar 31st, 2010 at 11:10am

hhomebrewer   Offline
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Fozz, you go to the website for your motherboard and you should see all the compatibility matrices for the chips that fit your board. I have a 1400MHz Socket A (also called a Socket 478, I think) from 2001 or 2002 if you want it. Even has the copper shim to keep you from crushing the die when you attach the heatsink...
 

I am homebrewer. I had 633 posts when for some unknown reason, my account disappeared...
AMD Phenom II X4 940 (Deneb), Asus M3N72-D motherboard, 2 x nVidia 8800GTS @640MB RAM, 1 x Seagate Barracuda 500Gb HDD (storage), 1 x Western Digital Black 250Gb HDD (boot), 12Gb 800Mhz G.Skill RAM (5-5-5-18), 2x Sony DVD writers, 28-inch ViewSonic monitor given to me by my computer guru, FS2004, Windows 7 Professional (64-bit), 850-watt Thermaltake modular p/s, 7 x 120mm fans to cool it...
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Reply #9 - Mar 31st, 2010 at 12:49pm

Fozzer   Offline
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An elderly FS 2004 addict!
Hereford. England. EGBS.

Posts: 24861
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hhomebrewer wrote on Mar 31st, 2010 at 11:10am:
Fozz, you go to the website for your motherboard and you should see all the compatibility matrices for the chips that fit your board. I have a 1400MHz Socket A (also called a Socket 478, I think) from 2001 or 2002 if you want it. Even has the copper shim to keep you from crushing the die when you attach the heatsink...


Hello Brewer...

....only the AMD Barton core 3200+ is slightly faster than my AMD Athlon core 2600+

http://www.cpu-world.com/CPUs/K7/TYPE-Athlon%20XP.html

..and they are all difficult to obtain now.

The slight difference in speed is probably not worth the effort in locating one!

I am now at the limit on my old (very old) Gigabyte K7 Socket A, AGP, Motherboard, but it is still serving me well!... Kiss...!

Paul....a collector of "old things"... Grin...!

...funnily enough...the only things I have had to upgrade on it over the years have been the AGP Graphics Cards ( and they don't make them any more!). The Processor seems to be satisfactory in its performance!
 

Dell Dimension 5000 BTX Tower. Win7 Home Edition, 32 Bit. Intel Pentium 4, dual 2.8 GHz. 2.5GB RAM, nVidia GF 9500GT 1GB. SATA 500GB + 80GB. Philips 17" LCD Monitor. Micronet ADSL Modem only. Saitek Cyborg Evo Force. FS 2004 + FSX. Briggs and Stratton Petrol Lawn Mower...Motor Bikes. Gas Cooker... and lots of musical instruments!.... ...!
Yamaha MO6,MM6,DX7,DX11,DX21,DX100,MK100,EMT10,PSR400,PSS780,Roland GW-8L v2,TR505,Casio MT-205,Korg CX3v2 dual manual,+ Leslie 760,M-Audio Prokeys88,KeyRig,Cubase,Keyfax4,Guitars,Orchestral,Baroque,Renaissance,Medieval Instruments.
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Reply #10 - Mar 31st, 2010 at 5:26pm

hhomebrewer   Offline
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Fozz, I have a 3200+ laying around here somewhere, and may be able to once again sink my lunchhooks into a 3800+ I had in my little emachines for a few years. I think I gave the 3800+ to my computer guru. I think I can get it back. The chances of him needing to put it into a machine that a customer may bring to him for an upgrade is minimal. The 3200+ and 3800+ chips are Socket 939s. Would that work for you? If so, you can have whichever one you want or both, if you want. I have no use for them.
 

I am homebrewer. I had 633 posts when for some unknown reason, my account disappeared...
AMD Phenom II X4 940 (Deneb), Asus M3N72-D motherboard, 2 x nVidia 8800GTS @640MB RAM, 1 x Seagate Barracuda 500Gb HDD (storage), 1 x Western Digital Black 250Gb HDD (boot), 12Gb 800Mhz G.Skill RAM (5-5-5-18), 2x Sony DVD writers, 28-inch ViewSonic monitor given to me by my computer guru, FS2004, Windows 7 Professional (64-bit), 850-watt Thermaltake modular p/s, 7 x 120mm fans to cool it...
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Reply #11 - Mar 31st, 2010 at 6:12pm

Fozzer   Offline
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An elderly FS 2004 addict!
Hereford. England. EGBS.

Posts: 24861
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hhomebrewer wrote on Mar 31st, 2010 at 5:26pm:
Fozz, I have a 3200+ laying around here somewhere, and may be able to once again sink my lunchhooks into a 3800+ I had in my little emachines for a few years. I think I gave the 3800+ to my computer guru. I think I can get it back. The chances of him needing to put it into a machine that a customer may bring to him for an upgrade is minimal. The 3200+ and 3800+ chips are Socket 939s. Would that work for you? If so, you can have whichever one you want or both, if you want. I have no use for them.


Hello Brewer...

The Socket 939 has 939 pins.
My Socket A has 453 pins.

So I doubt that the Processors are interchangeable?... Roll Eyes...!

I think I will stick with my Socket A 2600+ Processor and Motherboard until I change to a PCI-e Motherboard and suitable Processor, and a PCI-e Graphics Card.....

...with loadsa money......sometime in the future!...Wink... Grin...!

Thanks anyway!.... Wink...!

Paul... Smiley...!

P.S I was considering upgrading to a Socket 939 Motherboard at one time, but even those, (and AM2), are obsolete now!
I am always behind the times!.... Grin... Grin...!
It gets so confusing!... Roll Eyes...!
 

Dell Dimension 5000 BTX Tower. Win7 Home Edition, 32 Bit. Intel Pentium 4, dual 2.8 GHz. 2.5GB RAM, nVidia GF 9500GT 1GB. SATA 500GB + 80GB. Philips 17" LCD Monitor. Micronet ADSL Modem only. Saitek Cyborg Evo Force. FS 2004 + FSX. Briggs and Stratton Petrol Lawn Mower...Motor Bikes. Gas Cooker... and lots of musical instruments!.... ...!
Yamaha MO6,MM6,DX7,DX11,DX21,DX100,MK100,EMT10,PSR400,PSS780,Roland GW-8L v2,TR505,Casio MT-205,Korg CX3v2 dual manual,+ Leslie 760,M-Audio Prokeys88,KeyRig,Cubase,Keyfax4,Guitars,Orchestral,Baroque,Renaissance,Medieval Instruments.
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Reply #12 - Apr 1st, 2010 at 1:53am

hhomebrewer   Offline
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I'm always behind the times, too. It's cheaper back here...
 

I am homebrewer. I had 633 posts when for some unknown reason, my account disappeared...
AMD Phenom II X4 940 (Deneb), Asus M3N72-D motherboard, 2 x nVidia 8800GTS @640MB RAM, 1 x Seagate Barracuda 500Gb HDD (storage), 1 x Western Digital Black 250Gb HDD (boot), 12Gb 800Mhz G.Skill RAM (5-5-5-18), 2x Sony DVD writers, 28-inch ViewSonic monitor given to me by my computer guru, FS2004, Windows 7 Professional (64-bit), 850-watt Thermaltake modular p/s, 7 x 120mm fans to cool it...
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Reply #13 - Apr 2nd, 2010 at 5:14pm

machineman9   Offline
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Fozzer wrote on Mar 31st, 2010 at 8:04am:
machineman9 wrote on Mar 31st, 2010 at 8:01am:
Fozzer wrote on Mar 31st, 2010 at 7:55am:
machineman9 wrote on Mar 31st, 2010 at 7:48am:
The Ghz bit is how 'fast' it is, but not how powerful it is. It's like a car going along... If it is going at 5000RPM in first gear, the engine will be running fast, but a car in fifth gear at 4000RPM has the engine going slower, but overall is performing better.

So the Ghz is just how many cycles it does in a second, not how effective the cycles are.


According to cpubenchmark.net, the X940 comes in about 100 places better than your current processor, so if that all works (I am an Intel bloke, so I don't know a huge amount about AMD) then that should give a serious boost.


...and you reckon that a sooper-dooper, high-speed, X940 will fit in my Socket A Gigabyte Motherboard?

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Socket_A

Paul.... Wink... Wink...!

As I said, I am an Intel user, so I know little about AMD sockets.


Exactly what I was thinking...
I gave the full specification  of my system in the first Post...

Socket A Motherboard, and Socket A, AMD Processor.

Paul.

I'm not entirely sure what you're getting at. If you're condemning me for what I've already admitted to, then that seems like a lost cause. As I pointed out, there are websites to compare all sorts of computer components and they give a relative position and performance score. They know more about whats in their computer than I do, so they can check the parts which would work and see if they're greatly better or worse than what they currently have.
 

...
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Reply #14 - Apr 4th, 2010 at 9:45pm

hhomebrewer   Offline
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Gender: male
Posts: 607
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machineman9 wrote on Apr 2nd, 2010 at 5:14pm:
Fozzer wrote on Mar 31st, 2010 at 8:04am:
machineman9 wrote on Mar 31st, 2010 at 8:01am:
Fozzer wrote on Mar 31st, 2010 at 7:55am:
machineman9 wrote on Mar 31st, 2010 at 7:48am:
The Ghz bit is how 'fast' it is, but not how powerful it is. It's like a car going along... If it is going at 5000RPM in first gear, the engine will be running fast, but a car in fifth gear at 4000RPM has the engine going slower, but overall is performing better.

So the Ghz is just how many cycles it does in a second, not how effective the cycles are.


According to cpubenchmark.net, the X940 comes in about 100 places better than your current processor, so if that all works (I am an Intel bloke, so I don't know a huge amount about AMD) then that should give a serious boost.


...and you reckon that a sooper-dooper, high-speed, X940 will fit in my Socket A Gigabyte Motherboard?

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Socket_A

Paul.... Wink... Wink...!

As I said, I am an Intel user, so I know little about AMD sockets.


Exactly what I was thinking...
I gave the full specification  of my system in the first Post...

Socket A Motherboard, and Socket A, AMD Processor.

Paul.

I'm not entirely sure what you're getting at. If you're condemning me for what I've already admitted to, then that seems like a lost cause. As I pointed out, there are websites to compare all sorts of computer components and they give a relative position and performance score. They know more about whats in their computer than I do, so they can check the parts which would work and see if they're greatly better or worse than what they currently have.

Where can I find these sites so I can look at the numbers myself? I am very interested in this kind of stuff. Thanks!
 

I am homebrewer. I had 633 posts when for some unknown reason, my account disappeared...
AMD Phenom II X4 940 (Deneb), Asus M3N72-D motherboard, 2 x nVidia 8800GTS @640MB RAM, 1 x Seagate Barracuda 500Gb HDD (storage), 1 x Western Digital Black 250Gb HDD (boot), 12Gb 800Mhz G.Skill RAM (5-5-5-18), 2x Sony DVD writers, 28-inch ViewSonic monitor given to me by my computer guru, FS2004, Windows 7 Professional (64-bit), 850-watt Thermaltake modular p/s, 7 x 120mm fans to cool it...
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