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Your favorite cpu

I do remember when those came out! Somehow, considering how unknown they are. I was very taken aback by the weird model scheme myself. I myself had the 4790K.

I'd say the 4790K was one of my favorites! I didn't get much an OC on it, but MAN was that thing FAST. That was my first actual good processor! And I mean GOOD! With that and a GTX 960 back in the day, it really felt like I could run anything.

And before that one, I think the Core 2 Quad Q6600 was pretty sweet. I have a system I've had new since 2008 which still works with that processor. I'm sure many of us here remember its legacy!

EDIT: What! I just noticed the guy above me also has a 5950X and mentioned the Q6600 too - awesome!
My Q6600 still works although the plastic on one of the CPU cooler pegs broke (brittle due to old age) and 1 of 4 DDR2 ECC sticks died but it's registered and still ready for Windows 10. The motherboard heatsinks were glorious heat piped copper dinosaurs that a whole lot of early AM4 boards could have used. I haven't the heart to get rid of it yet.
 
Q6600 , mostly becasue it was such a step up from what i had previously to it, and the fact that it lasted me 11 years (2009-2020) , not to mention it was OC from 2.4ghz to 3.2ghz the whole 11 years lol, eventually sold it on ebay for £5 :D
 
Pentium 4 2A GHz

'A' means Northwood core, it's much cooler and faster than Willamette core. It can clock all the way to 3GHz on stock cooler with lower end motherboard. Heats up the room and not very fast (compared to even Sempron64 I got later on, Sempron 2500+ which only clock 1.4GHz is faster than this at 3GHz lol) but I liked it. Socket 478 have a good place in my heart, it's my first socket I bought with my own savings. Bought Celeron 1.7GHz before buying Pentium, that is a lot slower in gaming it's ridiculous. My older Duron 800MHz is faster than it
 
The Q6600 is also one of my favorites. I never had one as my main CPU but I bought a Q6600 based system in 2014 to use as a secondary PC. It was the first CPU I've overclocked (if not counting phones), it easily went from 2.4GHz to 3.0GHz but I didn't have much luck going above that. The Asus P5KC I used has a lot of vdroop so likely I didn't set high enough voltage.
In 2017 I moved the CPU in to a HP dc7900 SFF to use as a HTPC and that's where the CPU is still in use.

(Neofetch shows the clock speed wrong, it's actually BSEL modded and running at 3.0GHz)
putty_SWRIvvKKoy.png
 
My favorite was my old FX 8370e.
 
I have nothing against AMD, but most of the years I was buying it was true that intel, especially while overclocked, was the best CPU for my use-case.
Sorta worked out the same for me. But I did enjoy running the Barton core Athlon XP 3000+ with the 200MHz FSB and man it was speedy for its day.
It had an all copper cooler with 80mm fan and fastest memory option I could find at the time. Wish I had saved some CPUz screenshots from those days.
 
When it comes to topics like this, I usually try to avoid mentioning recent things because not enough time has passed to fully judge them yet, but I legitimately think my current 5800X3D might end up being it. In an era where chips aren't advancing as fast as they did in their prime (late 1990s and early 2000s), it's amazing how much of an uplift this was over the 3700X I had before it, which wasn't even that old at the time and itself was one heck of a value when I got it (two-third the cost of the 10700K while generally being 90%+ of the performance, and that's before mentioning the savings of the included cooler). The 5800X3D was the first of its kind, and it came as the capstone to the AM4 platform. The AM4 platform as a whole dethroned LGA775 for its legendary spot, and I agree with somewhat said earlier; I think that once time has passed and we can judge them more fully, a lot of the Zen 2 and especially Zen 3 CPUs will be easy mentions for this.

My older Core i5 2500K has to get a mention too simply due to how long it lasted me (very late 2011 until mid 2020), although that could also be a bad thing because it happened precisely because of how slow CPUs advanced in the mid and late 2010s. Before Intel launched the 12th generation, my opinion was that Intel had no noteworthy release after Sandy Bridge.

Okay, so... if the first is too recent to count, and if the second counts for longevity but is bittersweet because of why, then a third mention would basically be any of the old AMD Athlons from the very late 1990s and early to mid 2000s (Athlon, Athlon XP, and Athlon 64 X2), but perhaps the Athlon XP in particular. I was getting into PCs at the time, and that was sort of the CPU everyone seemed to have/want/recommend, and so of course I also wanted one. I never got one, but I did end up getting an Athlon 64 X2 when a friend of the family upgraded and passed it on to me, but it was unfortunately short lived. Those were times of fast growth and close competition.
 
When it comes to topics like this, I usually try to avoid mentioning recent things because not enough time has passed to fully judge them yet, but I legitimately think my current 5800X3D might end up being it. In an era where chips aren't advancing as fast as they did in their prime (late 1990s and early 2000s), it's amazing how much of an uplift this was over the 3700X I had before it, which wasn't even that old at the time and itself was one heck of a value when I got it (two-third the cost of the 10700K while generally being 90%+ of the performance, and that's before mentioning the savings of the included cooler). The 5800X3D was the first of its kind, and it came as the capstone to the AM4 platform. The AM4 platform as a whole dethroned LGA775 for its legendary spot, and I agree with somewhat said earlier; I think that once time has passed and we can judge them more fully, a lot of the Zen 2 and especially Zen 3 CPUs will be easy mentions for this.

My older Core i5 2500K has to get a mention too simply due to how long it lasted me (very late 2011 until mid 2020), although that could also be a bad thing because it happened precisely because of how slow CPUs advanced in the mid and late 2010s. Before Intel launched the 12th generation, my opinion was that Intel had no noteworthy release after Sandy Bridge.

Okay, so... if the first is too recent to count, and if the second counts for longevity but is bittersweet because of why, then a third mention would basically be any of the old AMD Athlons from the very late 1990s and early to mid 2000s (Athlon, Athlon XP, and Athlon 64 X2), but perhaps the Athlon XP in particular. I was getting into PCs at the time, and that was sort of the CPU everyone seemed to have/want/recommend, and so of course I also wanted one. I never got one, but I did end up getting an Athlon 64 X2 when a friend of the family upgraded and passed it on to me, but it was unfortunately short lived. Those were times of fast growth and close competition.
The first "snappy" computer I built was based on the athon xp 3000+ with Barton core and 200Mhz FSB.very fast for its time.
 
1734031699160.png

333mhz pentium 2 with a 66mhz bus. The motherboard in my dad's AST had a jumper on it to run the 100mhz bus. First overclock of my life. Amazing.

Almost accidental too - I was trying to make my computer go faster for Unreal - return to napali and noticed it.

Later, on the high from overclocking i decided to overwrite the refresh rate to my CRT monitor -- that ended up poorly and in the process I popped the monitor :D.
 
There was a bit of silicon lottery going on there. Most P2-333s couldn't hit 100mhz FSB. Most could get too 83mhz. It was the L2 cache chips that limited the OC.
I actually don't know what that motherboard did to make it work, or if it dropped the multi or what - it definitely wasn't 500 mhz tho? not sure. I just remember being really excited about it.
 
The crunch the core made as a chunk broke off while you are trying to clip the cooler on was fantastic.

I have never had that, and I'm honestly not even sure how one would go about it.. A friend killed his spanking new Athlon that way though.
 
Oh man CPUs I fell in love with:


AMD Duron with the Morgan core 1.2ghz

AMD Athlon x2 3600+

Intel C2D e7200

Intel q6600

Intel i7 920


each one for me was a technology breakthrough in every way, every one a platform upgrade. Each one in the middle of the ram speed races; GPU advancing at a wild pace. Each build was infinitely exciting. Game engines were pumping out games that looked breathtaking compared to the last. Even sound cards were crazy.

What a time to be alive. I’m happy I was there for it.
 
Not sure if this is the right place to post this. The question is:

What is your favorite CPU and why

My favourite CPUs are those ones that are very fast. Until they become slow, then they become not liked.

For example today, 12-core 24 thread with simultaneous multi-threading active, the ones without - no like.
 
Basically any ancient (pre-2002) Athlon/Duron CPU. No safety, no limits, no reason. Pure chaos and massacre. Truly manly processors.

Good shout, Cpu's got way more boring as time had gone on. K6 2 450 was pretty fun to overclock as well.

Pentium 75, probably highest % overclock chip I had on air with ease. You could just change the jumpers and run it at 120 or even 133mhz with a decent heatsink and fan.
 
Some of my favs
Pentium I
Pentium II
Athlon XP 2100
Athlon X 2 6000
Phenom II X4 940
I5-2500k
I7-9700k
i5-12600k

Honorable mention
Pentium 4
Pentium D
Phenom X3
Bulldozer
Arrow Lake
 
Good shout, Cpu's got way more boring as time had gone on. K6 2 450 was pretty fun to overclock as well.

Pentium 75, probably highest % overclock chip I had on air with ease. You could just change the jumpers and run it at 120 or even 133mhz with a decent heatsink and fan.
I had the same cpu first cpu, (AMD 450) zhow much did you get out that chip?
 
Pentium 200MMX @250MHz
Core2Duo 6750 2,66GHz @3.6Ghz
Pentium III 1400. This thing is so smooth! ASUS TUSL2C mobo
Xeon x5687 runs Debian 12 smooth.

I still own these CPU's and working in systems. I had plans to do an upgrade. But the thing is that i don't use the speed of a new Ryzen 9700. So i decided to stay with the x5687. And when this setup dies, i have a spare for parts. :peace:


The worst: AMD Phenom II x6 1100T Black Edition (Six-Core)
 
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Pentium 200MMX @250MHz
Core2Duo 6750 2,66GHz @3.6Ghz
Pentium III 1400. This thing is so smooth! ASUS TUSL2C mobo
Xeon x5687 runs Debian 12 smooth.

I still own these CPU's and working in systems. I had plans to do an upgrade. But the thing is that i don't use the speed of a new Ryzen 9700. So i decided to stay with the x5687. And when this setup dies, i have a spare for parts. :peace:


The worst: AMD Phenom II x6 1100T Black Edition (Six-Core)
Why was the phenom II the worst? I almost picked one of those up :P
 
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