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- Jun 1, 2018
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System Name | “Frankenstein” Dell T5500 (installed in T3500 case) |
---|---|
Processor | Xeon X5675 |
Motherboard | Dell T5500 |
Cooling | Dell Air cooler 0U016F |
Memory | 24 GB ECC Registered. DDR3 (4GB x 6) |
Video Card(s) | Sapphire R9 380X Nitro 4GB |
Storage | SATA SSD and WD HD |
Display(s) | Dell 24” LCD |
Case | Dell T3500 (donor) |
Audio Device(s) | Intel 2.0 HD audio on board |
Power Supply | Dell T5500 875 watt job. Nice beefy PS, but ugly power harness. |
Mouse | Um...generic? |
Keyboard | Dell basic keyboard |
Software | Windows 10 Pro 64 and PC Linux OS Mate 64 |
Benchmark Scores | Coming! |
Sounds like you got a great deal for $60.
The T7500 Dual Xeon configuration is generally not overclockable. A few single CPU configurations ...factory unlocked chips...are somewhat overclockable. Check the “Throttlestop on desktops” thread for exact details on some W35xx and W36xx CPUs that overclock on T3500 motherboards.
Many Third party X58 motherboards from Asus, Gigabyte, MSI allow higly overclockable Xeons through BIOS settings. But those tricks dont work in the Dell precision line.
There are some rare reports of people who claim to have suceeded with FSB type overclocking on T5500s or T7500s but solid info on that approach is lacking.
I am running a X5675 in my T5500 single CPU configuration and its quite peppy for what I am doing at the moment.
For around $60 you could get an X5680 on eBay and install it single CPU config. I know that doubles the cost, but for gaming, it would give you a 30% single core speed boost, which is probably as good as you can expect from overclocking. You could probably sell your matched X5650s and CPU riser card and make money on the deal.
The T7500 Dual Xeon configuration is generally not overclockable. A few single CPU configurations ...factory unlocked chips...are somewhat overclockable. Check the “Throttlestop on desktops” thread for exact details on some W35xx and W36xx CPUs that overclock on T3500 motherboards.
Many Third party X58 motherboards from Asus, Gigabyte, MSI allow higly overclockable Xeons through BIOS settings. But those tricks dont work in the Dell precision line.
There are some rare reports of people who claim to have suceeded with FSB type overclocking on T5500s or T7500s but solid info on that approach is lacking.
I am running a X5675 in my T5500 single CPU configuration and its quite peppy for what I am doing at the moment.
For around $60 you could get an X5680 on eBay and install it single CPU config. I know that doubles the cost, but for gaming, it would give you a 30% single core speed boost, which is probably as good as you can expect from overclocking. You could probably sell your matched X5650s and CPU riser card and make money on the deal.
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