cpu bottleneck?
I recently upgraded my vid card from ATI 9500 Pro 128MB to an FX9500 ultra
256MB and I am not getting the increase I thought I would. My processor is the original P4 2.0 GHz running on the 850 chipset with 512MB of RAM. Is it time to upgrade the proc also? If so, what is the reccommended speed? I am looking at an AMD 64 3000 with an Asus MB with 1GB of RAM. TIA Brad |
"Brad Rogers" wrote ... I recently upgraded my vid card from ATI 9500 Pro 128MB to an FX9500 ultra 256MB and I am not getting the increase I thought I would. My processor is the original P4 2.0 GHz running on the 850 chipset with 512MB of RAM. There's bottleneck: 2 ghz P4 since you stated no increase after video card switch. Is it time to upgrade the proc also? Yes but afraid not cuz that chipset 850's fsb is 400. If it is 850e, then thats 533 fsb. The last P4 with 533 fsb was P4 3.06 (with HT!). Another one thing was that this motherboard only had 4x agp. If so, what is the reccommended speed? I am looking at an AMD 64 3000 with an Asus MB with 1GB of RAM. Got $$$? Buy and you won't be disappointed!! |
"Brad Rogers" t wrote in message
... " I recently upgraded my vid card from ATI 9500 Pro 128MB to an FX9500 ultra 256MB and I am not getting the increase I thought I would. " You didn't state any benchmarks, so it is difficult to say whether your gains are to your setup's full potential. If you read http://graphics.tomshardware.com/graphic/20031229/ , you will see the difference between your two cards. You can then work out whether the gains you have are relative to the test-system. Try using Driver Cleaner, and then re-install your new drivers. That may sort out a few problems. http://www.driverheaven.net/cleaner/ If re-installing drivers doesn't give suitable gains, then further upgrades could be the answer. I understand that the i850 chipset utilises RDRAM ( http://www.intel.com/design/chipsets/850/ ). If you were to keep your motherboard, upgrading the CPU and adding more RAM, this may only lead to a futile dead-end. RDRAM may well hold some current systems up, but, with regards to any future upgrades, it is obsolete. Your best bet is to sell your motherboard, CPU and RAM on eBay, which will help with your upgrade budget. Athlon64 is very much the way to go, and you have two main socket choices, 754 and 939. Socket 939 is planned to take us into the future a lot more, but the cheapest compatible Athlon64 (3500+) is pretty expensive ($300+). Given the motherboard outlay ($100 - $200), and 2x 512MB dual-channel PC3200 ($200 - $350), this could be out of your budget. Socket 754 provides many more options than 939, and you've stated this may be your intention. Motherboards are cheaper ($60 - $175) and compatible Athlon64 CPUs are significantly cheaper than the socket 939 3500+: - Athlon64 2800+ http://snipurl.com/6bf9 $141.00 (Newcastle, 1.8Ghz, 512KB L2 cache) - Athlon64 3000+ http://snipurl.com/8x5h $164.00 (Newcastle, 2.0Ghz, 512KB L2 cache) - Athlon64 3200+ http://snipurl.com/8x5p $204.00 (Newcastle, 2.2Ghz, 512KB L2 cache) - Athlon64 3400+ http://snipurl.com/9gus $282.00 (Newcastle, 2.4Ghz, 512KB L2 cache) - Athlon64 3400+ http://snipurl.com/9gvb $293.00 (Clawhammer, 2.2Ghz, 1024KB L2 cache) - Athlon64 3700+ http://snipurl.com/9gv8 $497.00 (Clawhammer, 2.4Ghz, 1024KB L2 cache) You've given the 3000+ as an example in your budgeted upgrade choice. However, as socket 754 chipsets don't support dual-channel memory control, you may also consider starting off with 1x 512MB DDR, getting a 3400+ CPU, and adding the extra 512MB DDR in the future. You would certainly gain a lot from 2x 512MB RAM, but with much-less need to purchase a dual-channel kit with this socket, this could be a way of securing a better system in the near future. CPU performance in Doom3 has been banged-on about in recent times, but the game does provide relevant benchmarking for many future games. It may well help your decision to read this review: http://www.xbitlabs.com/articles/cpu...doom3-cpu.html |
didn't do your homework? It isn't much of a videocard upgrade
"Brad Rogers" t wrote in message ... I recently upgraded my vid card from ATI 9500 Pro 128MB to an FX9500 ultra 256MB and I am not getting the increase I thought I would. My processor is the original P4 2.0 GHz running on the 850 chipset with 512MB of RAM. Is it time to upgrade the proc also? If so, what is the reccommended speed? I am looking at an AMD 64 3000 with an Asus MB with 1GB of RAM. TIA Brad |
X800 Pro alteast or maybe a 6800 GT would have been better :) On Fri, 1 Oct 2004 11:33:05 -0400, "Predator" wrote: didn't do your homework? It isn't much of a videocard upgrade "Brad Rogers" t wrote in message ... I recently upgraded my vid card from ATI 9500 Pro 128MB to an FX9500 ultra 256MB and I am not getting the increase I thought I would. My processor is the original P4 2.0 GHz running on the 850 chipset with 512MB of RAM. Is it time to upgrade the proc also? If so, what is the reccommended speed? I am looking at an AMD 64 3000 with an Asus MB with 1GB of RAM. TIA Brad |
Well, when you show me where I can get a 6800GT or X800 pro for $175 let me
know and I will get it. Brad "Avid Gamer" wrote in message ... X800 Pro alteast or maybe a 6800 GT would have been better :) On Fri, 1 Oct 2004 11:33:05 -0400, "Predator" wrote: didn't do your homework? It isn't much of a videocard upgrade "Brad Rogers" t wrote in message ... I recently upgraded my vid card from ATI 9500 Pro 128MB to an FX9500 ultra 256MB and I am not getting the increase I thought I would. My processor is the original P4 2.0 GHz running on the 850 chipset with 512MB of RAM. Is it time to upgrade the proc also? If so, what is the reccommended speed? I am looking at an AMD 64 3000 with an Asus MB with 1GB of RAM. TIA Brad |
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