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TaPaKaH

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Everything posted by TaPaKaH

  1. I reckon you were FSB and not core-limited on this one. 1.67V is more than enough for even the worst of Allendales to crack 4GHz on LN2.
  2. You can share your PCMark05 tweaks now
  3. These old cards can be a mess. As per spec, X700 should have 400/350 stock clocks and GDDR1 memory. Usually these cards come with device ID 1002-5E4D. As per spec, X700 Pro should have 425/432 stock clocks and GDDR3 memory. Usually these cards come with device ID 1002-5E4B. But you also have cards like the ones you mentioned that are neither here nor there. It's really hard to say whether they are upgraded versions of X700 or crippled versions of X700 Pro (especially that drivers and stock clocks can be manipulated) so it really depends on personal view of the person in charge of hardware categories, Antinomy.
  4. Not that it matters for your final position (since you've got 6min34 which will increase your total by 0.2s), but kudos to James for making a video at 2 o'clock in the night! Does this SPD improve anything on Sandy or is more of a showoff?
  5. Up for sale are two socket 775 CPUs that I had laying around with no use. #1: Pentium E2140 (SLA93) Q702B Bought it purely for research since it's by far the oldest M0 Allendale I've ever seen. FSB wall is around 455MHz on air. #2: Core2Duo E6600 (SL9S8) L629B The core on this chip is very good for a B2 Conroe (3.6GHz 1.25V boots into OS on air, no further test done) but on LN2 is likely to be held back by relatively low FSB wall (around 525MHz on air). Asking 10 Euros for both CPUs together (doesn't make much sense to sell separate). Price includes worldwide shipping.
  6. For benching, the best choice is a 2x2GB pair of Elpida Hypers. For daily use, Micron D9PFJ-based or Hynix BFR/CFR-based 4GB modules should be best. (Samsungs don't seem to work too well on 775).
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