It did. It went in a system that went out to someone, forgot who. Given away a lot of machines since then.did the chip i sent back in Apr. ever show up?
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It did. It went in a system that went out to someone, forgot who. Given away a lot of machines since then.did the chip i sent back in Apr. ever show up?
Quick search on ebay found this one for about the same cost as shipping will be for most of us:Anyone have a 120GB-256GB SATA SSD. Trying to replace the old ladies dying HDD in her PC
I know the feeling. I have a lot perfectly fine pieces with no real purpose.I don't know if I should claim the cooler, I could use it for my 3570k vs the stock cooler - if I ever even find something to do with my 3570k, I have everything I need done by something else, I can't think what to do with it...
If this has an lga775 mount, I can definitely put it to good use.
The bottom plate and the X clamp are universal for all sockets, the only difference is the stud length. There are long ones and short ones, the latter only being needed on LGA2011 and maybe other large LGA sockets. The picture seems to have the longer studs, so it'll work on LGA775. Though, unless you have like a QX6850, Q9650, or QX9770 then a 212 is complete overkill.If this has an lga775 mount, I can definitely put it to good use.![]()
Thank you for the additional details! Your knowledge on this older stuff is priceless.The bottom plate and the X clamp are universal for all sockets, the only difference is the stud length. There are long ones and short ones, the latter only being needed on LGA2011 and maybe other large LGA sockets. The picture seems to have the longer studs, so it'll work on LGA775. Though, unless you have like a QX6850, Q9650, or QX9770 then a 212 is complete overkill.
Though you need to be careful, the cooler is so tall that it will hit and go past the door on many shallower cases. You need at least 7" of depth in the case to fit the cooler. The nominal height on the cooler is 6.2", but the heatpipes vary quite a bit. Sometimes they're stupidly long and stick out well past the fins.
Smaller coolers that would work would be the Zalman CNPS5X, Asus V-60, Cooler Master Hyper 101 or the TX3. These are all long out of production unfortunately, so you'll have to pick them up second hand and hope all of the mounting hardware exists.
9 x 400FSB @ 3.6 FTW!Thank you for the additional details! Your knowledge on this older stuff is priceless.
Yep, the case I have is gargantuan so shouldn't have clearance issues and I plan to use it with a q6600 that I want to mod to run at 3ghz like people did back in the old days.![]()
Or that too. I just want it to be 'fast' and reliable.9 x 400FSB @ 3.6 FTW!
I have three C0 stepping Q6600s. The two retail CPUs did 9x400 with no problem although the OEM one couldn't do better than 3.5Ghz. One of those Q6600s was running at 3.6Ghz for more than ten years without a problem.Or that too. I just want it to be 'fast' and reliable.![]()
Nice! I just want to see what it was like to mod the cpu and have it just run faster like that. I've never done it before as the most I ever did was used a 486slc to upgrade a 286 to a 486.I have three C0 stepping Q6600s. The two retail CPUs did 9x400 with no problem although the OEM one couldn't do better than 3.5Ghz. One of those Q6600s was running at 3.6Ghz for more than ten years without a problem.
If you want to try balls to the wall, get a Q6700, you can theoretically hit 4 GHz.
I have one! I didn't think they had more room than the q6600.
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Thank you for the great info as usual! The target motherboard only accepts 1066 fsb cpus, so no chance I'm messing with the fsb on the q6700, but great to know they have that capability.Not sure how much room they have over a Q6600, but they have a 10x multiplier, which lets you go to 4 GHz while maintaining a 1600 MHz FSB that doesn't throw everything off. Even if you can only get a 1333 MHz bus, you're still way ahead of a QX6850. Those things are still hideously expensive, even being almost 16 years old.
Too bad Intel didn't make Wolfdale quads with a 1066 MHz bus. The Pentium E series with Wolfdale-3M cores were monster overclockers. You could go +1000 MHz on stock voltage and they wouldn't even care.
Some Googling came up with the following that refers to potentially being able to flash the bios to support the CPU:I'm trying to help a member out who bought a 3570k from me and found out the K series wont work on his board. He has a H-Joshua-H61-uATX (HP board) that was running an i3-2330.
Would anyone have a non K i5-3570 to trade for the K version?
Looking at the specs for the motherboard and from my experience with HPs, either he needs to update his bios to the latest version first, or he has a bad processor. Usually all the K variants are supported if the non-k is supported, and the non-k is definitely supported in the entire lga1155 series according to this document:I'm trying to help a member out who bought a 3570k from me and found out the K series wont work on his board. He has a H-Joshua-H61-uATX (HP board) that was running an i3-2330.
Would anyone have a non K i5-3570 to trade for the K version?
The i5-3xxxk isn't. I checked the hp site page on the board for the cpu upgrade.Looking at the specs for the motherboard and from my experience with HPs, either he needs to update his bios to the latest version first, or he has a bad processor. Usually all the K variants are supported if the non-k is supported, and the non-k is definitely supported in the entire lga1155 series according to this document:
https://support.hp.com/us-en/document/c03506147
I would have him put back in the stock cpu and see if it still works, if not, it wasn't the 3570k that did it. If it does, then he just needs to try it again or try another processor.
They never specify the k versions in specs, but they will work if the non-k does. All of my HPs and Dells have been upgraded this way to the k version since it was cheaper/more readily available (including that system I got from you a few years backThe i5-3xxxk isn't. I checked the hp site page on the board for the cpu upgrade.
That's true too, but usually you'll see some pattern of limitations in the supported processors on the official lists. HP also sometimes has multiple motherboard part numbers that end up supporting different specs which could be the case here since their official specs also get revised with motherboard changes.There are HP and Dell models that don't support K series CPUs. There are also models that only support Sandy Bridge chips and not Ivy Bridge. I've run across this issue numerous times.
https://h30434.www3.hp.com/t5/Deskt...-for-CPU-Upgarde-Sandy-to/td-p/3098377/page/2
Someone else with presumably the same logic board that won't accept a 2500k.
Probably won't get much interest, but I got an Early 2006 iMac (A1174) that was given to me by a customer because the hard drive died. I don't need the machine. It takes a standard 3.5" SATA drive, the mounting hardware is included. It has 2 GB of RAM.
Don't know much about it, other than it gets to the question folder because no bootable media. Comes with the keyboard and mouse that came with the unit.
If you pay shipping, you can have it. Else, it's going to the recycling pile.
Still have any of those old agp cards? Suddenly find myself in need...I'm not giving away the HD4670 lol. It's going into my collection of nice old hardware.
There were some other AGP cards in that pile of stuff I found that I'm going to give away, but they're much older and probably won't have any interest. The best is an AIW Radeon 9600, but it's missing the pigtail. I went back and dug in the recycling pile but I couldn't find it. The other cards are a couple of TNT and TNT2 M64 cards.
Gwarren07 hooked me up with a Pentium D 945 and an additional 930, which is nice.
I'm interested
Just let me know how much shipping to 23607 would be
Still have any of those old agp cards? Suddenly find myself in need...
s-video ftw! That will work without the pigtail.Still have that AIW 9600, but no pigtail for it. I can test it with the cable from another one of my AIW cards, but you'll need to source the cable. They're not easy to find, they look like this:
https://i0.wp.com/the620guy.com/wp-.../20160629-ATI_AIW_9600_128M_NTSC__Cable_4.jpg
It might be possible to rig something up with male dupont headers, but it'd be a hacky mess.
s-video ftw! That will work without the pigtail.![]()
Rats!..Nope. There's a different pigtail for that. The card has a non-standard 8 pin mini-DIN connector that needs a purple brick to break it out to S-Video and RCA.
https://images.highspeedbackbone.net/skuimages/gallery/large/A177-3034-k.jpg
These cards really are worthless without the pigtails, unless you know how to make your own cables.