Apr 21, 2011, 06:26 AM // 06:26
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#1
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Jungle Guide
Join Date: Mar 2007
Guild: Mature Gaming Association
Profession: Me/E
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Worth the processor upgrade?
Here's my custom-built system:
Athlon II X3, 3.0 Ghz OC'd to 3.47 ghz
4 GB Kingston Hyper-X DDR3 RAM 1333 (@1286)
Radeon HD 5770
Seagate Momentus XT Hybrid HDD
ASUS AM3 Motherboard, ITX form factor
I'm considering upgrading the processor to a Phenom II X6, probably the 3.2 ghz Black Edition one, and overclocking it as well. Anyone have any advice as to the worthiness of this upgrade? Would I notice it in things such as games or general Windows performance?
Last edited by cebalrai; Apr 21, 2011 at 07:13 AM // 07:13..
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Apr 21, 2011, 08:16 AM // 08:16
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#2
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Lion's Arch Merchant
Join Date: Mar 2007
Guild: Sellin hot stock tips for pro[fit]
Profession: Me/E
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Either CPU is fine really, but the x6 would be the winner. The rig is gonna kick like a mother, so no, you wont be short on performance.
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Apr 21, 2011, 11:05 AM // 11:05
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#3
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Ascalonian Squire
Join Date: May 2005
Location: London, UK
Profession: R/
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I just upgraded my system from:
Intel E8600 Core2 Duo 3.33GHz
Intel DX38BT LGA775 Motherboard
4GB Corsair 1333MHz RAM
AMD Radeon 5850 1GB Video Card
Samsung 500GB Hard Drive
to:
Intel Core i5 2500k (Quad) 3.33GHz
Gigabyte P67 B3 Motherboard
Western Digital Caviar Black 1TB Hard Drive
The upgrade definitely made a difference in games that utilize more than 2 cores, I was playing Rift at the time and my framerates jumped up going from 20-36fps to roughly 40-60 fps. Of course software that uses multiple cores showed a lot of improvement, Handbrake encodes went from 1.3 hours to .4 hours per movie, PhotoShop and Blender lots more zippy.
However, given you have 3 cores and would be going to 6, I'm not sure how much benefit you'll see in gaming. I would think a video card upgrade might give you more bang for the buck. Best to have a look for benchmarks, like from Tom's Hardware or AnandTech hopefully there's something that has the 2 processors so you can really see what the improvement will give you. That's what I did. I was considering going to the Core2Quad instead of the Core i5, but the architecture was the same... so only games that used all four cores would actually improve performance as the individual processor performance is (obviously) the same between a Core2Due and Core2Quad.
Hope that helps!
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Apr 21, 2011, 12:32 PM // 12:32
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#4
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Jungle Guide
Join Date: Mar 2007
Guild: Mature Gaming Association
Profession: Me/E
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Thanks for your input thus far. Btw remember it's not just going from 3 cores to 6, it's going from Athlon II to Phenom II, so I'd be getting a processor with L3 cache. (whatever that means, anyone know?)
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Apr 21, 2011, 01:20 PM // 13:20
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#5
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Ascalonian Squire
Join Date: May 2005
Location: London, UK
Profession: R/
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Well, it sounds like you should see some benefit then. As I said, apps should definitely benefit... games, well, depends on the game.
Here's a comparison from Tom's Hardware.
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Apr 21, 2011, 01:21 PM // 13:21
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#6
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Academy Page
Join Date: Apr 2011
Location: Sweden
Profession: E/
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If we are only talking games then you won't see any difference in most games.
Radeon HD 5770 is just to slow.
To see a difference with a processor upgrade you need a gtx560ti or a AMD 6870 or better. Still the small difference in clock speed between the x6 and x3 makes little difference.
Last edited by Draca; Apr 21, 2011 at 01:32 PM // 13:32..
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Apr 21, 2011, 03:41 PM // 15:41
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#8
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Hell's Protector
Join Date: Aug 2005
Location: Canada
Guild: Brothers Disgruntled
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Quote:
Originally Posted by cebalrai
Would I notice it in things such as games
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That would depend upon the game etc. In theory it should allow you to run games at faster frame rates and higher graphics settings, but if you are already playing games at 60fps and max settings, then there obviously won't be any change.
A better video card would make more of a difference (not that the 5770 is a slouch in any sense).
Quote:
... or general Windows performance?
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Not much - can you tell when a window opens in 0.4 seconds instead of 0.43 seconds? An SSD would be better at improving Windows performance.
Overall, a faster CPU in this case, would show up more in CPU intensive tasks like large spreadsheets, video editing, etc.
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Apr 21, 2011, 08:10 PM // 20:10
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#9
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Jungle Guide
Join Date: Mar 2007
Guild: Mature Gaming Association
Profession: Me/E
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Draca
If we are only talking games then you won't see any difference in most games.
Radeon HD 5770 is just to slow.
To see a difference with a processor upgrade you need a gtx560ti or a AMD 6870 or better. Still the small difference in clock speed between the x6 and x3 makes little difference.
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I game at hi res where performance is 95% dependent on the GPU anyway...
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Apr 22, 2011, 03:31 AM // 03:31
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#10
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Lion's Arch Merchant
Join Date: Nov 2005
Guild: NA
Profession: W/Mo
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Quote:
Originally Posted by cebalrai
I game at hi res where performance is 95% dependent on the GPU anyway...
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My current gaming rig specs are:
- Windows 7 64-bit
- AMD Phenom II X6 1090T (3.2 GHz)
- ATI 5970
- 8 GB Memory
- ASUS M4A79T Deluxe motherboard
Last upgrade to the system was going from an AMD Phenom II X4 3.2 to the X6 -- which I bought on the day it was commercially available locally. (Had to flash the BIOS before my MB would recognize the X6 processor. )
After this upgrade I never really noticed any real difference with GW FPS-wise. However, it's a different story with other games and apps (such as handbrake) that made more use of the extra cores.
But going from 3 cores to 6 cores, I'd say you may notice more of a difference (but likely not that much in GW).
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Apr 24, 2011, 09:49 AM // 09:49
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#11
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Jungle Guide
Join Date: Mar 2007
Guild: Mature Gaming Association
Profession: Me/E
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Maybe I'll buy a SSD instead...
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Apr 24, 2011, 11:11 AM // 11:11
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#12
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Forge Runner
Join Date: Jul 2006
Location: Denmark
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Save your money and buy a "proper" upgrade at some point, I doubt you'll see much of an improvement from what you are considering.
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Apr 24, 2011, 11:19 PM // 23:19
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#13
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Jungle Guide
Join Date: Mar 2007
Guild: Mature Gaming Association
Profession: Me/E
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Quote:
Originally Posted by majoho
Save your money and buy a "proper" upgrade at some point, I doubt you'll see much of an improvement from what you are considering.
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This kind of response isn't very helpful since money isn't an issue for me.
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Apr 25, 2011, 04:55 AM // 04:55
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#14
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Lion's Arch Merchant
Join Date: Jan 2006
Profession: N/
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have you considered trying to unlock your x3 or it didnt work?
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Apr 25, 2011, 12:21 PM // 12:21
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#15
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Forge Runner
Join Date: Jul 2006
Location: Denmark
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Quote:
Originally Posted by cebalrai
This kind of response isn't very helpful since money isn't an issue for me.
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Ok sorry, I assumed it was.
If money isn't an issue get an Intel motherboard and an i7-2500k cpu like sc2071 suggested.
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Apr 30, 2011, 07:49 AM // 07:49
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#16
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Jungle Guide
Join Date: Mar 2007
Guild: Mature Gaming Association
Profession: Me/E
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Quote:
Originally Posted by skervy
have you considered trying to unlock your x3 or it didnt work?
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Unfortunately it didn't work. The other X3 I built for a friend though is now an x4...
Quote:
Originally Posted by majoho
Ok sorry, I assumed it was.
If money isn't an issue get an Intel motherboard and an i7-2500k cpu like sc2071 suggested.
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If you read the OP you'd realize this also doesn't answer the question.
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Apr 30, 2011, 09:08 AM // 09:08
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#17
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Academy Page
Join Date: Apr 2011
Location: Sweden
Profession: E/
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Quote:
Originally Posted by cebalrai
This kind of response isn't very helpful since money isn't an issue for me.
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Then why are you considering a minimal upgrade like the a x3 to a x6?
if money was no issue you should get a i7 or wait for a bulldozer and grab a HD6970 (or 2). Also grab a ssd while you are at it.
Which would be what this guy calls a proper upgrade where things will feel faster. Unless you tell me you are doing video encoding the x3 to x6 upgrade is useless.
Last edited by Draca; Apr 30, 2011 at 09:18 AM // 09:18..
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Apr 30, 2011, 03:03 PM // 15:03
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#18
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Desert Nomad
Join Date: May 2005
Location: America
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Really depends on what games you're playing.
My last setup wasn an AM2+, first with an Athlon II X3 425 @ 3.45 GHz (not unlocked), then a Phenom II X4 955 @ 4 GHz. The only real benefit was in Bad Company 2 which is fairly heavily threaded. The only advantage of 6 cores over 4 or 3 is apps that are very heavily threaded.
In Jan I replaced that with a 2500k @ 4.8 GHz which simply crushed the Phenom II. The Thuban (X6) Phenom II's generally do overclock a little better than other AMD chips, and of course have a core advantage but per clock cycle the i5 / i7 are more efficient and the new Sandy Bridges are ridiculously easy to overclock.
I'd say if you want an upgrade either go with Sandy Bridge or buy one of the newer AMD mobos that has an AM3+ socket (they are block sockets, for example this) and keep using your Athlon II until Bulldozer comes out. Mind you AM3+ support on the 800 series chipsets is unofficial though.
Last edited by Krill; Apr 30, 2011 at 03:06 PM // 15:06..
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Apr 30, 2011, 04:54 PM // 16:54
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#19
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Forge Runner
Join Date: Jul 2006
Location: Denmark
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Quote:
Originally Posted by cebalrai
If you read the OP you'd realize this also doesn't answer the question.
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It kinda did, get a proper upgrade = not worth it, I would even go so far to call it a complete waste of money.
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Apr 30, 2011, 10:56 PM // 22:56
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#20
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Jungle Guide
Join Date: Mar 2007
Guild: Mature Gaming Association
Profession: Me/E
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Quote:
Originally Posted by majoho
It kinda did, get a proper upgrade = not worth it, I would even go so far to call it a complete waste of money.
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*Sigh*
Yes I realize I could basically get rid of my computer and buy a new one with entirely different processor, RAM, GPU, HDD, mobo, and PSU. Why do you feel the need to say this when it's so stupidly obvious and therefore completely meaningless? This thread is about upgrading from one point to another...
I do play Civ V which I think uses 4+ threads... And also I'd be going from a processor with no L3 cache to one with it... And I could probably overclock a Thuban a bit higher than the x3 (it's a Rana 440 btw). With these elements in mind I think it's a valid question. But your opinion of "just get a whole new computer" is duly noted, lol...
Incidentally I do have my eye on the June 11th Bulldozer release date. I think they'll drop into AM3 boards right?
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