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Posts posted by Pasi123
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Which slot you put it in? The slot under the CPU socket is PCIe 3.0 x4 while the bottom one is x2. Though your read speed is above what x2 could do but way below what x4 should do.
Have you tried other tests like CrystalDiskMark?
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21 hours ago, FranklyFried said:
- what RAM situation would be best, should I switch it up? I've actually got a stick of 8GB Hynix 1600mhz laying around (I think), which works as far as I know. Would it be better to just have the two 8GB sticks in the system, for example?
I would replace the 2GB stick with the other 8GB stick.
With the 2GB stick in the system only 8GB will be in dual channel (flex mode). With 2x 8GB + 2x 4GB that would be 16GB
But if you don't need more than 16GB RAM in total then it would be best to go with just 2x 8GB sticks
Since you have a Z68 board you could overclock the CPU a bit, assuming you don't have the small stock pancake cooler.
4c/8t 2600(K)/2700K/3770(K)/Xeon E3 v1/v2 would be a pretty big upgrade if you can find one for really cheap
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Have you already tried to disable BD PROCHOT with ThrottleStop?
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On 10/22/2022 at 5:00 PM, PDifolco said:
Well the problem seems to be your mobo, doesn't support more than 2400MHz
If you want to use 3000MT XMP you need to upgrade it to a good B550 board, but then getting an Intel CPU would make more sense now (13600K is a bomb)
Not sure what's your budget and your usage, thought you were into gaming where the 5800X3D rocks
That's not true, my sister's PC has the same motherboard and it can do 2933MT/s without any problems. Though I haven't tried setting it higher because it only has a Ryzen 3 1200 but with a newer CPU it should be fine at 3000MT/s or higher
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I've been on the same platform since 2013 (Intel X58) but my next system might be AMD.
I will most likely stay on X58 for few more years or possibly switch to using my LGA2011 system as my main PC.
Currently the newest AMD systems I own are K10 based. AM3 system with an Athlon II X3 and a dual Socket F (LGA1207) system with 2x 6-core Opteron 2419 EE
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9 hours ago, Echothedolpin said:
Your most likely problem is that board likely does not support UEFI and all 1050TIs I know of require UEFI motherboards to function.
The only solution is to use a newer board or older GPU.
Source: had the same issue myself on some older systems, multiple Intel boards.
Most 1050 Ti's shouldn't require UEFI.
19 hours ago, novaplays9000 said:intel desktop board 21 b6 e1
That is not the right model number.
Here is Intel's guide for indentifying their boards. Or if your system boots then you could use CPU-Z
https://www.intel.com/content/www/us/en/support/articles/000005663/boards-and-kits.html
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Do you just want to know what would have been the best back then or are you planning to buy them? Don't expect to find them for cheap.
Intel Core2 Extreme QX9770
ASUS Rampage Extreme X48
8GB (4x2GB) DDR3, or 16GB (4x4GB) which is not officially supported but should work.
If you want to buy a LGA775 retro rig then I'd recommend getting a Q9550/Q9650 and a P35 or P45 board instead
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You should be able to boot from a M.2 NVMe SSD on a PCI-E adapter by using DUET+Refind.
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What CPU it has currently? It most likely doesn't bottleneck the GPUs in old games and new games wouldn't run on it anyway
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I've seen some people using 4x 4GB on that board but because it doesn't officially support 4GB sticks there is no guarantee it works. Some sticks might work while others don't
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Fujitsu Ergo Pro x564 with 3x random 64MB sticks
440BX system with 3x random 128MB sticks
IBM ThinkCentre S50 with 2x 1GB DDR400
Lenovo ThinkStation S30 with 4x 16GB DDR3 1600MHz ECC Registered
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On 8/18/2022 at 1:54 AM, Mel0n. said:
The Retro Web seems to have that board but there isn't much info about it
https://theretroweb.com/motherboards/s/sidus-386-486c64l-sid
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4 minutes ago, Fasauceome said:
At first I thought you meant the Ryzen 3 2300. But if we're talking all Intel CPUs, @Kid.Lazeris correct. The 4570T is newest and does not lack anything the others have.
It does lack some cores compared to the i5-2300. The 4570T and 650 are 2c/4t while the 2300 is 4c/4t
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22 minutes ago, Nik schaad said:
Nah I used a microwave. 700W for a full minute and fsr it worked
How?! I'd expect it to be completely fried after that
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It might be thermal pad residue or whatever it's called
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E7-8890 v4 is LGA2011-1 which is not compatible with X79 (LGA2011) nor X99 (LGA2011-3) boards.
LGA2011-1 was only used in high-end servers with up to 8 sockets
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3 hours ago, Giant_Hunger said:
if the e5 1650 v2 is the i7 4930k then what cpu is the e5 2667 v2? and which one performs more better in gaming the 1650 v2 4ghz oc vs 2667 v2 stock?
The E5-2667 v2 doesn't have any i7 equivalent because there never was any 8c/16t i7's for that platform.
The 1650 v2 at 4.0GHz or above (something like 4.2GHz should be pretty easy to hit) is most likely better for gaming than the 2667 v2 at stock because games usually prefer higher single core performance over higher core count at lower clockspeed.
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3 hours ago, Giant_Hunger said:
Wait? are you telling me these are the same cpu but with different names?
Now that I looked at it the E5-1650 v2 seems to be more like the i7-4930K because it has 12MB cache.
But yeah, the Xeons and i7's are pretty much the same but with different features like ECC support enabled and might have a bit different clockspeed.
Fun fact, the older Sandy Bridge-E(P) based 6c/12t i7-3930K and i7-3960X (and Xeons like E5-1650 0) used the same die as the 8c/16t Xeons, for example E5-2690 0, even though there never was a 8c/16t i7 for that gen.
You can see the disabled cores in this image. The die also has 20MB cache so some of it was disabled for the 6c/12t CPUs.
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LGA2011 or LGA2011-3? And what motherboard?
The best one for LGA2011 would be the Xeon E5-1680v2 which is a overclockable 8c/16t CPU.
For cheaper options there is a 6c/12t E5-1650v2 (i7-4960X) which can be overclocked
or E5-2667v2 8c/16t which is locked but has quite high clocks by default.
Some older revisions of OEM systems don't support Ivy Bridge-E(P) so for them the best ones would be 6c/12t E5-1650 0 (i7-3960X), 8c/16t E5-2690 0, or 8c/16t E5-2687W 0.
I don't know much of what's available for LGA2011-3 but there is at least some 8c/12t and 10c/20t core i7's like the 6900K and 6950X
Can you solder ports to a motherboard
in CPUs, Motherboards, and Memory
Posted
H61 chipset only has support for 4x SATA 3Gb ports