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#1
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MoBo / CPU Question
Hi all.
I'm looking to upgrade my CPU and I was wondering approximately how big of a CPU I could get without replacing my MoBo. I'm not sure exactly the make of the MoBo but right now I am running a 900Mhz Athlon Thunderbird. The MoBo is probably a couple of years old now if that helps. TIA. |
#2
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On Wed, 28 Jan 2004 13:21:11 GMT, "Erin Peterson"
wrote: Hi all. I'm looking to upgrade my CPU and I was wondering approximately how big of a CPU I could get without replacing my MoBo. I'm not sure exactly the make of the MoBo but right now I am running a 900Mhz Athlon Thunderbird. The MoBo is probably a couple of years old now if that helps. TIA. We need to know the specs of the motherboard, make/model/chipset. A 900MHz T'Bird is a little more than 2 years old, the boards of same era as a 900MHz T'Bird usually supported only CPUs with 100MHz FSB, which would limit you to a 1.4GHz T'Bird, which are now somewhat rare, and might(?) come in two versions, 100 & 133MHz FSB, of which you might only be able to use the 100MHz FSB version. IMHO, it's not worthwhile to upgrade your present motherboard unless at a minimum, it supports 133MHz (DDR266) FSB and accepts DDR memory. Otherwise there's too a great difference in performance possible by replacing the board. |
#3
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"kony" wrote in message news IMHO, it's not worthwhile to upgrade your present motherboard unless at a minimum, it supports 133MHz (DDR266) FSB and accepts DDR memory. Otherwise there's too a great difference in performance possible by replacing the board. Hey kony. Thanks for the reply. At this point, you're pretty much just confirming suspicisions I've already had. At the moment I'm caught in the upgrade a piece at a time vs. build a new computer conundrum and I'm leaning heavily towards just building a new one. Could you suggest a good/low cost MoBo? Low cost of course being a relative term meaning best bang for the buck. Also, in your opinion, should I go Intel or AMD for a new chip? I'm not really looking for state of the art, just a good chip in the 1 to 2 Ghz range. Thanks again. |
#4
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On Wed, 28 Jan 2004 17:54:27 GMT, "Erin Peterson"
wrote: Thanks for the reply. At this point, you're pretty much just confirming suspicisions I've already had. At the moment I'm caught in the upgrade a piece at a time vs. build a new computer conundrum and I'm leaning heavily towards just building a new one. Could you suggest a good/low cost MoBo? Low cost of course being a relative term meaning best bang for the buck. Also, in your opinion, should I go Intel or AMD for a new chip? I'm not really looking for state of the art, just a good chip in the 1 to 2 Ghz range. Thanks again. If you feel a 2nd computer would be beneficial, then building from scratch might be the way to go, OR if you want to take your time doing it, a piece at a time and do a clean OS install... which isn't always necessary but can be a good idea in some situations. One key factor in deciding to upgrade or replace can be the amount of downtime tolerable and the adequacy of case & power supply. A good name-brand 300W or higher power supply and a case with at minimum, a fairly unobstructed rear exahaust fan below the power supply, should be used. If the case & power aren't suitable you might as well get the new case and power first, set up the case for good airflow with minimal noise... nobody likes a loud computer these days, and a new system will produce around 2X the heat as your present system. Too many cases would be perfectly suitable except for overly restrictive stamped-in-metal fan grills. With those cases i suggest cutting out the fan grill, and if you have a situation where small objects (fingers, paws, etc) might get into the fan, add a far less restrictive chrome fan grill. If your hard drive is as old as the rest of the system it's another area to look at an upgrade. Also consider that most new motherboards only support AGP v2, 1.5V video cards... your present card may be a v2 card, or could be the older, AGP v1, 3.3V card, which isn't compatible, won't even physically fit in a new board's AGP slot. If you need a new video card too, it might make sense to be a board with integrated video (though I'd recommend getting one with an AGP slot too, just in case you'd like to upgrade the video later). The below suggested board also comes in an integrated video version, named "A7N8X-VM", http://www.newegg.com/app/ViewProduc...ion=13-131-466 Considering your desire, 1-2 GHz speed range, the best value would be an Athlon XP based system. Possibly something like: Athlon XP2500 Barton http://www.newegg.com/app/viewProduc...ion=19-103-378 Asus A7N8X motherboard http://www.newegg.com/app/ViewProduc...ion=13-131-468 A pair of 512MB PC2700 (or PC3200) Memory Modules |
#5
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Don't waste your time, goto Dell and get a whole PC for $400.
"Erin Peterson" wrote in message ... Hi all. I'm looking to upgrade my CPU and I was wondering approximately how big of a CPU I could get without replacing my MoBo. I'm not sure exactly the make of the MoBo but right now I am running a 900Mhz Athlon Thunderbird. The MoBo is probably a couple of years old now if that helps. TIA. |
#6
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Paul L wrote:
Don't waste your time, goto Dell and get a whole PC for $400. Real helpful top-post in a hardware group Paul. Idiot. -- ~misfit~ "Erin Peterson" wrote in message ... Hi all. I'm looking to upgrade my CPU and I was wondering approximately how big of a CPU I could get without replacing my MoBo. I'm not sure exactly the make of the MoBo but right now I am running a 900Mhz Athlon Thunderbird. The MoBo is probably a couple of years old now if that helps. TIA. |
#7
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On Fri, 30 Jan 2004 03:52:19 GMT, "Paul L"
wrote: Don't waste your time, goto Dell and get a whole PC for $400. Except it'll keep costing $400, instead of a standardized configuration. $400 will get pretty close to a standard, non-proprietary setup, excepting a P4 CPU... then _next_ upgrade the whole box doesn't have to be trashed again, which is not only more expensive, but worse on the environment. |
#8
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how is your old hardware reusable when the mb dies. do you have simms and a
1.6gb harddrive in your homebuilt? "kony" wrote in message ... On Fri, 30 Jan 2004 03:52:19 GMT, "Paul L" wrote: Don't waste your time, goto Dell and get a whole PC for $400. Except it'll keep costing $400, instead of a standardized configuration. $400 will get pretty close to a standard, non-proprietary setup, excepting a P4 CPU... then _next_ upgrade the whole box doesn't have to be trashed again, which is not only more expensive, but worse on the environment. |
#9
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On Fri, 30 Jan 2004 20:09:18 GMT, "Paul L"
wrote: how is your old hardware reusable when the mb dies. do you have simms and a 1.6gb harddrive in your homebuilt? Many of us don't wait till our systems are that old to upgrade, we can keep fairly high performance per usage, for less cost by incrementally replacing only what's needed, when needed. Since the OP didn't have SIMMs, nor likely a 1.6GB HDD, going to extremes only makes your argument look less credible. It can be a good choice for some people, buying a Dell, but generally it's only done by those without the ability (or time) to do it themselves. |
#10
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this guy did wait until it was too old and now he needs a new pc.
Unless you've got a solution for him, why are you wasting your time? Add up what the components cost and the time to install the OS and apps, and tell me 400 isn't a good deal "kony" wrote in message ... On Fri, 30 Jan 2004 20:09:18 GMT, "Paul L" wrote: how is your old hardware reusable when the mb dies. do you have simms and a 1.6gb harddrive in your homebuilt? Many of us don't wait till our systems are that old to upgrade, we can keep fairly high performance per usage, for less cost by incrementally replacing only what's needed, when needed. Since the OP didn't have SIMMs, nor likely a 1.6GB HDD, going to extremes only makes your argument look less credible. It can be a good choice for some people, buying a Dell, but generally it's only done by those without the ability (or time) to do it themselves. |
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