CougTek
Hairy Aussie
My new build consist of a Phenom II X2 545 nested on a GigaByte GA-M770T-UD3P. I paid 92$CAN for the CPU (roughly 85U$). Thanks to the SB710 of the motherboard and the advanced clock calibration feature in the BIOS, I've been able to unlock the remaning two cores. At POST and in Windows, the processor is identified as a Phenom II X4 B45. It's working at 3.0GHz. I've been able to boot inside Windows and I'm now running Orthos to check the stability. So far, so good. Note that this feature isn't available in the original F1 BIOS version. It became available in the beta version of the F2 BIOS and it's there in the F3 (latest as of today) version.
Intel's cheapest quad core cost me more than 160$CAN. My cheapo CPU beats it in almost every benchmark.
I plan to do the same for another X2 545 on a GigaByte GA-M785GMT-UD2H. AMD's yields are a lot better than they were even just two months ago so there are very good chances that it will work too. The Phenom II X2 are currently the best value processors on the market. I would not even be worried to sell those things configured like this, assuming I have the time to test them for 24 hours. Of course, I would not be selling it as a quad core and the customer would only pay the normal bargain price for the locked 545 (I'm not a crook).
These are great times for the customers.
Intel's cheapest quad core cost me more than 160$CAN. My cheapo CPU beats it in almost every benchmark.
I plan to do the same for another X2 545 on a GigaByte GA-M785GMT-UD2H. AMD's yields are a lot better than they were even just two months ago so there are very good chances that it will work too. The Phenom II X2 are currently the best value processors on the market. I would not even be worried to sell those things configured like this, assuming I have the time to test them for 24 hours. Of course, I would not be selling it as a quad core and the customer would only pay the normal bargain price for the locked 545 (I'm not a crook).
These are great times for the customers.