My problem is that if I buy all these parts in Canada it's going to be 20-30% more than in the US when you add in the additional markups and taxes (not to mention its a nightmare to find one place that has everything you need in stock). But we are heading to the States for Easter to visit family and thus I can bring them back across and as long as we are gone more than 48 hours (and not unlucky) we don't have to pay duty. So the time does matter for me :)
Using all that extra overclocked horsepower is not really useful now but in a year or two I find its what keeps an older CPU chugging right along with the new boys and can extend the upgrade cycle. I think I am leaning towards the DualCore Wolfsdale because I think there is a lot of value in having the 45nm cores. If a few months down the road it turns out I need more power I can dump in a quad core then. On Wed, Mar 5, 2008 at 11:35 AM, <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > The Q9450 is due for official release on the 19th I think (in the UK at > least, I expected the US to have it earlier *shrug*), so potentially another > 2 weeks wait.....although if you keep a PC for 4 years, whats 2 weeks wait? :) > > > Hitting 4GHz is nice but there is very little that you would need that for. > Games do not utilise that much power as most are GPU-bound, which leaves you > are pure mathematical programs such as video encoders and [EMAIL PROTECTED] > > I have a water-cooled Q6600 that I have overclocked from between 3.2 and > 3.7GHz since I have had it and in the vast majority of the work I do, the > difference those extra 500MHz make are not noticable. > > With the new 45nm Yorkfield cores, its even less of an issue as they are > supposedly 5-10% faster clock for clock over the previous 65nm cores. > > There has also been a lot of debate over the Yorkfield cores burning out > rapidly when over-volted. The theory is that the 45nm process leaves them > substantially more suscetible to burn-out and therefore keeping the voltage > as close to stock as possible is advised for day-to-day use. > > It could be scare-mongering by overly-eager overclockers but I wouldn't > chance any large voltage bumps on a yorkfield until they have been on shelves > for a few weeks. > > > Regards, > > Jason Tozer > Database Analyst > London > Ext 1131 - 3SC.5 > > > -----Original Message----- > From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] > [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] Behalf Of Brian Weeden > > > Sent: 05 March 2008 16:23 > To: [email protected] > Subject: Re: [H] CPUs > > > I was looking for that quadcore and couldn't find it on Newegg, which > is weird, because it comes up at a lot of smaller dealers under > Froogle. And there is no mention of the Q9450 on Anand's site or > Tom's Hardware, which is really strange if the CPUs have been released > (or are close to release). > > I'm also taking overclocking potential into mind here. I know that > there are some on the list who shy away from it but I've overclocked > every CPU I've had and always taken advantage of free CPU cycles. And > I completely agree with the methodology and risks laid out here (which > I am willing to take): > > http://www.anandtech.com/cpuchipsets/intel/showdoc.aspx?i=3251&p=6 > > Many people are overclocking the E8400 to 4 Ghz with standard voltage > and air cooling which is a definite bonus in its book. The Q6600 does > alright and can get to 3 Ghz without too much trouble, but runs much > hotter and sucks up a ton of power. The issue with the Q9450 is that > it is multiplier locked at 8x, meaning the only way to overclock it is > to bump up the bus speed which is a much harder prospect. Also keep > in mind that the bus speed with a dualcore is essentially 1/2 the bus > speed of a dual core. > > Thanks for the pointer on the mobo - you are definitely right on with that > one. > > On Wed, Mar 5, 2008 at 10:20 AM, <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > > If you expect these new parts to be the foundation of a PC that will last > 3-4 years again (with upgrades) I would certainly look at getting an IX38 > chipset. > > > > Also, take a look at the Q9450, gives you the best of both worlds :) > > > > If your set on the parts you listed, your CPU choice is based on what you > run now and intend to run in the future.......if you are going to run a lot > of VMs, then the quad is almost certainly better. > > > > VMWare (Workstation at least) limits the number of CPUs to 2 per guest OS > but this should not be an issue in anyway. > > > > Regards, > > > > Jason Tozer > > Database Analyst > > London > > Ext 1131 - 3SC.5 > > > > > > > > > > -----Original Message----- > > From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] > > [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] Behalf Of Brian Weeden > > Sent: 05 March 2008 15:14 > > To: hwg > > Subject: [H] CPUs > > > > > > Going to be buying the parts for a new PC next week and I'm pretty > > psyched as I'm replacing an Athlon system I built 3-4 years ago and > > have been upgrading piecemeal. So I've got a 3000+ Athlon 64 running > > on an nForce4 mobo. > > > > After 6 months of research I am still debating over dual core vs quad > > core. I'm going to continue using my existing video card as it's > > doing just fine and here's the rest of the parts list: > > > > Mobo - Asus P5K-E/WIFI-AP > > PSU - OCZ Stealthstream 600W > > RAM - 2x2GB G.Skill DDR2 800 > > DVD - Samsung SH-S203B > > Fans - 2x Scythe 120mm > > > > So I'm debating between these two CPUs: > > Q6600 Kentsfield (2.4 Ghz, Quadcore, 65nm) > > E8400 Wolfsdale (3.0 Ghz, Dualcore, 45nm) > > > > They are both within $20 in price so really it comes down to other > > features. I know that the majority of programs these days don't take > > advantage of more than 2 cores (except for the multimedia big boys > > like Photoshop and video encoders). While I will be using the machine > > for some A/V work, that won't be a common task. More commonly it will > > be for multitasking several programs at once under Windows XP for work > > and then gaming. > > > > The kicker is that I am getting rid of my HTPC and replacing it with a > > NAS and the Popcorn Hour settop box. The HTPC used to be my ripping, > > encoding, burning, and downloading box which was nice because I could > > offload those intensive (both time and horsepower) tasks to it and not > > have it slow down my main PC that I use for work and gaming. With it > > going away, those tasks will now be done on my main PC. I was > > envisioning perhaps running 2 or 3 VMs at once doing all these various > > tasks. Anyone see problems with that under XP and the ability for > > those VMs to use separate CPUs and RAM? Or am I reaching too far and > > is this something I can't do under XP? I have several work programs > > that are Windows only (along with games) which are the two reasons I > > haven't gone to Ubuntu. > > > > ---- > > Brian > > > > > > > > > This message and any attachment are confidential and may be privileged or > otherwise protected from disclosure. > If you are not the intended recipient, please telephone or email the sender > and delete this message and any > attachment from your system. 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