- Joined
- Jan 19, 2016
- Messages
- 1,086 (0.34/day)
- Location
- South Florida
System Name | BTXTREME |
---|---|
Processor | QX6800 SLACP Core2 Extreme |
Motherboard | Dell 0WG864 LGA775 BTX |
Cooling | Dell T9303 heatpipe cooler, Delta GFB1212VHG 2 motor fan. |
Memory | 8GB Dell DDR2@800 |
Video Card(s) | Sapphire Dual BIOS R9-285 ITX O/C 2GB DDR5 |
Storage | Crucial M500 240GB SSD |
Display(s) | Dell 22" LCD |
Case | Dell Dimension E 520 MT |
Audio Device(s) | onboard sound with Logitech Z523 speakers |
Power Supply | EVGA B2 750W semi modular |
Mouse | Logitech wireless (two installed) |
Keyboard | Logitech wireless backlit |
Software | Win7-64, Throttlestop 6.00 overclock |
Benchmark Scores | 3DMark 11 P7644 (52% )In Win7 64, Firestrike 6892 ( 58% ) http://valid.x86.fr/l2j5p1 |
It will be interesting to see if the W35xx, and W55xx unlocked Xeons can overclock as well as the QX6xxx, and QX9xxx CPUs. Most of the OEM computers that support those were DDR2 machines.
The i7 Extremes supported DDR3-1066, The unlocked Xeons DDR3-1333, and Hyperthreading Which the QX never had. The W5570/5580 have the added distinction of being unlocked 2x CPU, and also have the massive RAM capacity that server CPUs typically enjoy. Another question is whether 6 cores give ant adavantage in gaming vs. 4 cores.
The i7 Extremes supported DDR3-1066, The unlocked Xeons DDR3-1333, and Hyperthreading Which the QX never had. The W5570/5580 have the added distinction of being unlocked 2x CPU, and also have the massive RAM capacity that server CPUs typically enjoy. Another question is whether 6 cores give ant adavantage in gaming vs. 4 cores.