List the Current CPU's you own .......
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List the Current CPU's you own .......
Hello everyone i just came up with something we normally don't put out there ....
Curious to see what CPU's you own and why ,I guess you bought it
1600x AMD 1st Gen Ryzen -Daughters first Rig B350 Asrock Pro
8086k Binned by Silicone Lottery @5.2 Ghz Gaming Z370 Asrock Fatality
6950x Wanted HEDT for the power and the 40 lanes of PCI-E Asrock Fatality Professional
3950x Going back to AMD from previous experiences also trying new type of Architecture with the potential to have a better user experience all around when using programs and gaming perfect mix of both X570 Tuff by Asus
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I have a Core 2 Duo "Wolfdale" E8600 E0, apparently a late run, as the date code appears to be for 2009, looks like I have one of the last Core 2s, LOL.
2: Athlon X4 "Kaveri" 860K
3: Core i7 Extreme "Bloomfield" 965
4: Ryzen 3 3200G
5: Ryzen 7 3700X
Ones I possibly still have:
An early Core 2 Duo E8400 C0, which seems to have the more pronounced quirk of the idle temp reporting being high.
A fussy Core 2 Quad "Kentsfield" (65nm) Q6600 that throws bus errors at only 367 Mhz FSB (must increase FSB termination voltage and blow more cool air on it than typical, even at low load and possibly even with low core temps! Seems strange that room temp can cause it to fail with the FSB at only 367 Mhz.) (Appears to be from 2008) (VID is 1.3250V)
I think I have a "Yorkfield" as well (Q9450?) Don't remember exactly, probably in my closet. Received it in 2016 and it's confirmed to be working.
I had a 2007 Core 2 Duo "Conroe" E4500 pulled from an Acer that was definitely would spank my below-average Pentium E2180 "Conroe" that I purchased in 2008! The E2180 was a poop overclocker! The E4500 was popped into my Asus P5QL Pro motherboard in 2009. But I left it behind in 2016, as it was grossly underpowered for the new stuff I'm doing.
Sadly, the E4500 M0 was my best processor in my fleet during 2012, except the tail-end of 2012, IIRC, LOL. (When I got my E8400 C0) Shows how poor I was, I couldn't afford diddly squat for even a first-gen Core-i series!
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HI,
E5200 came with a acer desktop
Q9550 I upgraded it too
Little Gateway laptop I have no idea what it has just a little core 2 duo 3gb memory still working amazingly enough
5930k waiting for another gpu to get back online
7900x sold
9940x on my third lol
10900k though I would try a real gaming chip for a change
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I have a Core 2 Duo "Wolfdale" E8600 E0, apparently a late run, as the date code appears to be for 2009, looks like I have one of the last Core 2s, LOL.
2: Athlon X4 "Kaveri" 860K
3: Core i7 Extreme "Bloomfield" 965
4: Ryzen 3 3200G
5: Ryzen 7 3700X
Ones I possibly still have:
An early Core 2 Duo E8400 C0, which seems to have the more pronounced quirk of the idle temp reporting being high.
A fussy Core 2 Quad "Kentsfield" (65nm) Q6600 that throws bus errors at only 367 Mhz FSB (must increase FSB termination voltage and blow more cool air on it than typical, even at low load and possibly even with low core temps! Seems strange that room temp can cause it to fail with the FSB at only 367 Mhz.) (Appears to be from 2008) (VID is 1.3250V)
I think I have a "Yorkfield" as well (Q9450?) Don't remember exactly, probably in my closet. Received it in 2016 and it's confirmed to be working.
I had a 2007 Core 2 Duo "Conroe" E4500 pulled from an Acer that was definitely would spank my below-average Pentium E2180 "Conroe" that I purchased in 2008! The E2180 was a poop overclocker! The E4500 was popped into my Asus P5QL Pro motherboard in 2009. But I left it behind in 2016, as it was grossly underpowered for the new stuff I'm doing.
Sadly, the E4500 M0 was my best processor in my fleet during 2012, except the tail-end of 2012, IIRC, LOL. (When I got my E8400 C0) Shows how poor I was, I couldn't afford diddly squat for even a first-gen Core-i series!
Oh my i remember all of those back then that was too RICH for me hahaha i had went through all the cheap Pentiums from the first to the 4th and no lie they did game pretty well being a real budget cpu
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Z80, 6052, pentium, atom, amd a6, i5
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Intel P3 700 from 2000, til 2003, mid range probably system then
AMD K6 based Secondary Desktop as backup machine back then for lighter games, and such
AMD Duron--For Family PC
AMD Athlon XP 2500+ bought in 2003, died in 2005, when i severly messed up my Abit Nf7-s motherboard with viruses, rootkits, and such, and PC shop then couldn't get rid of it
AMD Athlon 3500+ a few years later, used til 2012 when i purchased AMD APU 3620 Desktop, (mom still using that one)
When i purchased in early 2016 AMD FX 8310, with Radeon R7 240 video card, thinking it was true 8 core, i was so excited at the time, or at first....August 2017, came across more funds to afford the Intel I7 7700 basked Desktop
Had an Intel I7 7700 Desktop Machine, Asus G11CD-K Desktop up til last week, then case got too cramped, and video card was overheating, so upgraded to The Intel I7 10700 10th Gen
Intel 7700HQ In Laptop machine, bought it as backup to Main Desktop, and to use portable at times
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Some great Cpu's some not so great but this is a good guideline for user experience
Depending on what you are doing with the Machine most of the Cpu's are mid-line which is pretty cool
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Windows Desktops:
* AMD Ryzen 7 1700X / Asus Prime X370-PRO Mbd.
* AMD FX-8350 / Gigabyte GA-990FXA Mbd.
* AMD Phenom II X4 960T / Asus M4N82 Deluxe Mbd.
* AMD Athlon XP 2800+ / Asus A7N8X-E Deluxe Mbd.
* AMD Athlon XP 2400+ / Asus A7V400-MX Mbd.
Windows Notebooks:
* AMD Ryzen 7 2700U / Acer Swift 3 SF315-41G-R6MP
* AMD Athlon 64 3400+ / HP Pavilion zv5380us
Non-Windows Computers:
* Broadcom BCM2711, quad-core Cortex-A72 (ARMv8) 64-bit SoC @ 1.5 GHz / Raspberry Pi 4 Model B
* Broadcom BCM2837B0 quad-core, Cortex-A53 (ARMv8) 64-bit SoC @ 1.4 GHz / Raspberry Pi 3 Model B+
Misc CPUs:
* AMD Phenom II X4 955 @ 3200 MHz
* AMD Athlon 64 X2 3800+ @ 2000 MHz
* AMD Athlon XP 2000+ @ 1667 MHz
* AMD Athlon XP 1800+ @ 1533 MHz
* AMD Duron 850 @ 850 MHz
* Intel Pentium 4 1.6 @ 1600 MHz
* Intel Pentium MMX 200 @ 200MHz
* Intel Pentium 120 @ 120 MHz
Other CPUs (no longer have):
* Athlon 1000 @ 1000 MHz Thunderbird @ 1000 MHz
* AMD K6-2/300 @ 300 MHz
* Intel 486DX2-66 @ 66 MHz
Other CPUs in Computers (no longer have):
* Motorola 68000 @ 8/16 MHz Atari Mega STE
* Motorola 68000 @ 8 MHz / Atari 520ST
* MOS Technology 6502 / Atari 65XE
* MOS Technology 6502 / Atari 600XL
* Zilog Z80B @ 5.07 MHz / Lobo MAX‑80
* Zilog Z80 @ 1.78 MHz / Radio Shack TRS-80 Model I
Update:
The only computer that gave me a lot of problems was this one:
* AMD Phenom II X4 955 @ 3200 MHz / Asus M4N82 Deluxe Mbd.
After constant errors I ran memtest86. It gave numerous errors. I then replaced the RAM.
The problems did not end. It ran hotter than I liked. Eventually the CPU failed and would only boot up at 400MHz. I replaced the CPU with a AMD Phenom II X4 960T.
That does end the problems. One day while trying to shut it down lightning hit very close and took out the computer.
Ironically my name for this computer was Lightning.
I gave up on this computer and built another one and daring fate also called it Lightning.
* AMD FX-8350 / Gigabyte GA-990FXA motherboard
Eventually I figured out the motherboard for the original Lightning was bad and got a replacement. Since I had already called the new computer Lightning I had to come up with a new name. I gave it the appropriate name of Phoenix.
Last edited by MisterEd; 05 Jul 2020 at 12:31.
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AMD Athlon XP 2500+ bought in 2003, died in 2005, when i severly messed up my Abit Nf7-s motherboard with viruses, rootkits, and such, and PC shop then couldn't get rid of it
The Barton died literally? I would have been suspecting the PSU. That was a tough era regarding PSUs, too many of them had bad caps. The Abit NF7-S likely had much better caps, normally shouldn't have died. It would seem like nothing worse than a wiped out or corrupted BIOS chip, if the PSU caps were OK. Yes, you did mention "rootkits"! In the socket 462 era, it usually were just "fake file websites" and porn web sites, but by 2006, a PHP-based message board was believed to have been a victim of a code-injection attack. There was a malicious URL embedded in the web page.
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Yeah well i was testing Windows Live Onecare then, and may have accidently opened something i shouldn't have, not sure exactly how it happened, all i know is that PC shop i went to, unforuately after 4-5 trips there as it kept having issues.
Finally told me can't repair this, gonna have to replace your motherboard, processor, and hard drive , so i was like finally ok, as was tired of all the trips there