Kadey said:Unlink the ram and CPU. Set the multiplier. It's recommended to never go beyond 9x unless you know exactly what you are doing. Set your fsb. For 3.6ghz, it's 1600. 3.4 it's like 1515, 3.2, 1410, and so on. And have the voltage on auto. Overclocking for dummies. It's my first time and I got the hang of it pretty easily.
2 things :TheGreatDave said:I just downloaded the Crysis demo, to see what my new PC is like. <20FPS on medium settings, yay!
I've got a Core 2 Duo E4600, 1GB 8600GT and 3GB of RAM. Which should I be blaming for the shitty performance? I obviously don't expect 60FPS or anything but on medium I don't expect things to literally be popping up right in front of me.
TheGreatDave said:I just downloaded the Crysis demo, to see what my new PC is like. <20FPS on medium settings, yay!
I've got a Core 2 Duo E4600, 1GB 8600GT and 3GB of RAM. Which should I be blaming for the shitty performance? I obviously don't expect 60FPS or anything but on medium I don't expect things to literally be popping up right in front of me.
Better yet. Buy it off Craigslist for 10-$20 bucks for the poor saps that have an old PIII that bought it and tried to play it. :loleznark said:download one of the custom setting mods and it runs a lot better. Seriously though, buy the game, if it runs too shitty, sell it used for a $10-20 hit. It is f'ing worth it.
TheGreatDave said:I just downloaded the Crysis demo, to see what my new PC is like. <20FPS on medium settings, yay!
I've got a Core 2 Duo E4600, 1GB 8600GT and 3GB of RAM. Which should I be blaming for the shitty performance? I obviously don't expect 60FPS or anything but on medium I don't expect things to literally be popping up right in front of me.
TheGreatDave said:I just downloaded the Crysis demo, to see what my new PC is like. <20FPS on medium settings, yay!
I've got a Core 2 Duo E4600, 1GB 8600GT and 3GB of RAM. Which should I be blaming for the shitty performance? I obviously don't expect 60FPS or anything but on medium I don't expect things to literally be popping up right in front of me.
bee said:8600gt was just a bad card the gts was also, you might find some people on here saying there not too bad but they really are, by the name you kinda figure there not too far behind the 8800 but nothing could be farther from the truth
TheGreatDave said:I think I'll hold off for half a year or so before getting a new card. The 8800s are almost near what I'd be happy to pay, if I hold off I should be able to get a good card in 6-12 months or so for £90
rabhw said:Yeah, it's the 8600GT that's severely holding you back. It's a decent little hard for mid-range gaming and some older stuff, but by no means is it made to handle some of the more intense beasts, and especially not Crysis.
bee said:whilst i wouldn't recommend one , there certainly cheap and fast
http://www.overclockers.co.uk/showproduct.php?prodid=GX-086-OK&groupid=701&catid=56&subcat=927
VictimOfGrief said:2 things :
1) The demo
2) Crysis.
mr stroke said::lol
+1
so true, even the best card right now can't run it right...![]()
It's too bad that that many cores would be mostly useless for most people. Heck, 4 cores is mostly useless for most peopleoo Kosma oo said:12 Cores?
Fap fap fap
Kadey said:Intel will cut prices of its processors. There are some big price cuts for the old 65nm chips but the price action on the new 45nm processors are just really small:
High-end model that will get reduced in price is the Core 2 Quad Q9550 at 2.83GHz and 12MB cache and it will get 2 dollars cheaper from its current $527 to $525. These are, of course, the wholesale prices. The very popular Core 2 Quad Q9450 at 2.66GHz and 12MB cache will drop from $319 to $317. The Core 2 Quad Q9300 at 2.5GHz and 6MB cache will drop from $270 to $268.
Two older models, the Q6700 with a 2.66GHz clock speed and 8MB cache and a 1066MHz FSB speed will drop from the current $527 to $268. The ultra popular 65nm Kentsfield Q6600 with its 2.4GHz clock and 8MB cache will drop from $250 to $227.
All dual core 45nm E8x0 series Penryn based models will drop $2 and as of next week, the E8500 with 3.16GHz clock 6MB cache and FSB 1333 will drop to $266, the E8400 with a 3GHz clock and 6MB cache and FSB 1333 will drop to $187; and finally, the E8200 clocked at 2.66GHz with 6MB cache and FSB 1333 drops to $167.
The older 65nm E6850 at 3GHz and 4MB cache drops to $266, the E6750 at 2.66GHz and 4MB cache drops to $187, and the E6550 at 2.33GHz and 4MB cache drops to $167.
The 4-series of Core 2 Duo processors will drop slightly in price. Starting with the E4700 with 2.60GHz clock, 800MHz FSB speed and 2MB cache drops $2 to $137, the E4600 with 2.40GHz clock, 800MHz FSB speed and 2MB cache drops from $139 to $117 while the E4500 with 2.20GHz clock 800MHz FSB speed and 2MB cache drops $2 to $117.
TheGreatDave said:Last question, I swear.
I bought some new RAM. 2 1GB sticks. My motherboard has 2 sets of 2 channels; one set has a 2GB RAM stick and an empty channel, the other set has 1GB of RAM and an empty channel. If I add either of my new sticks of memory, the PC won't boot. I get 3 long beeps and it restarts.
Any setting in the BIOS I should be looking for? Do the channels both have to have the same capacity of RAM or something? I'm basically looking to have 5GB total.
Umm GTFO I've seen it running without any hick-ups on a 500-Euro-PC (the demo, everything on high)mr stroke said::lol
+1
so true, even the best card right now can't run it right...![]()
M3d10n said:Test each stick individually first, to confirm that they're all OK. Then try using only the new sticks in the same channel, and then try adding your old sticks to the other slots, testing one by one. If they have different frequencies, you can try going into the BIOS and force the RAM to use the same frequency as the slowest stick.
eznark said:not even close to being accurate.
You were lied then. I have a damn 3870X2 4 Gigs of RM and 4 cores each one running at 2.9. And I cannot fucking get 30fps constant. The game will always go down to 20 fps every single time a massive firefight occurs. BTW, I use DX10 and 1280x800 res. Everything on High.Jacobi said:Umm GTFO I've seen it running without any hick-ups on a 500-Euro-PC (the demo, everything on high)
The framerate still drops below 25 in a lot on scenes like the beach, and in the snow levels. I tested it on a GX2 to confirm this, check my posts in this thread in a couple pages ago.Kadey said:You do not need AA at high resolutions so it doesn't matter.
godhandiscen said:Are you serious? Check Tom Hardware's revies. Crysis gives you <20fps once you enable AA with any freaking card. Including the 9800GX2
You were lied then. I have a damn 3870X2 4 Gigs of RM and 4 cores each one running at 2.9. And I cannot fucking get 30fps constant. The game will always go down to 20 fps every single time a massive firefight occurs. BTW, I use DX10 and 1280x800 res. Everything on High.
Kadey said:174.93 is out by the way.
godhandiscen said:The framerate still drops below 25 in a lot on scenes like the beach, and in the snow levels. I tested it on a GX2 to confirm this, check my posts in this thread in a couple pages ago.
SRG01 said:Is this a stable one? I stopped updating my nVidia drivers a while back because a bunch of them kept glitching out on me.
Kadey said:Aren't you the one with a Q6600? You do know the E8400 is way better for games right? And like I said, having the thing overclocked, to 4.0ghz and with a stock 9800GX2, will get you this.
Now it's possible to overclock the thing even more, up to 4.5ghz with an air cooler before it reaches the limit of the highest temp I would go.
My GPU temps are pretty normal. I could overclock it as well and produce even better results.
I wouldn't say way better since most games are as CPU dependent, so it shouldn't make THAT much of a difference.Kadey said:Aren't you the one with a Q6600? You do know the E8400 is way better for games right? And like I said, having the thing overclocked, to 4.0ghz and with a stock 9800GX2, will get you this.
TheGreatDave said:But there's no technical reason why I shouldn't be able to mix and match various size RAM sticks? They're all DDR2 or whatever.
Is there an application I can download to find out exactly what my current RAM is, other than just the size?
Kadey said:Well I can say it sucks for the GX2. It actually took away 20fps in certain games. :lol I can't speak for any other GPU. .85 beta drivers are out as well but I haven't and won't try it. .74 seems to be about right at the moment.
zoku88 said:I wouldn't say way better since most games are as CPU dependent, so it shouldn't make THAT much of a difference.
M3d10n said:DDR2 memory comes in different max frequencies (533, 667 and 800 MHz). It's usually printed on the sticks themselves. Sometimes some mobos get confused when trying to autodetect frequencies of different sticks (brands and sizes) or try to enable dual-channel when it obviously won't work.
And you can use CPUZ (http://www.cpuid.com/cpuz.php) to get detailed on your RAM sticks (frequency, manufacturer name, etc).
mr stroke said::lol
+1
so true, even the best card right now can't run it right...![]()
TheGreatDave said:I just messed around with it; I forced it to 667 (the new sticks are 800) and sent 0.2v extra (the new sticks require it) and all I get is various states of non complience. Either I get no video out and the computer keeps running, the system restarts at the checking memory bit (which only ever detects the two old ones, and thus 3GB of memory) or I get 3 long beeps as soon as I switch it on and nothing happens.
I'm just gonna send this RAM back and get the exact duplicates of the stuff I have already. I can't be bothered with all this stuff, and I don't need more than 3GB right now, so I can take my time.
I'm almost 100% sure that this is false. You see much more of a difference between CPUs at lower resolutions (where the game is no longer GPU bottlenecked) than at higher resolutions (where the effectiveness of your CPU is lowered due to the GPU being the bottleneck.)SRG01 said:The CPU frequently becomes the bottleneck in most systems at higher resolutions if paired with a good graphics card. To the best of my knowledge.
Sure, the 8400 is better for games (and is cheaper,) but I still wouldn't say WAY better. I think at high resolutions, the difference is fairly minute.Kadey said:Overall it is way better. If you're purely having a processor for gaming, it'll be pretty ignorant to get the Q6600 over the E8400. Crysis itself is best with duo core.
zoku88 said:I'm almost 100% sure that this is false. You see much more of a difference between CPUs at lower resolutions (where the game is no longer GPU bottlenecked) than at higher resolutions (where the effectiveness of your CPU is lowered due to the GPU being the bottleneck.)
Hmm? You know they're making a whole new architecture right? It's releasing at the end of the year. Nahalem? Integrated memory controller (DDR3) and 4 cores on one die.teh_pwn said:So what's Intel's plan for next year? I was looking at processors, and they've seem to hit another wall: Power. At load, quad core Core 2s use 200+ watts...
Yorksfield doesn't seem to outperform Kentsfield that much. Only the ultra-expensive Yorksfields seem to clearly and significantly perform better.
So, 16 Atom based Cores or something?
zoku88 said:Sure, the 8400 is better for games (and is cheaper,) but I still wouldn't say WAY better. I think at high resolutions, the difference is fairly minute.
And I think your last statement is misleading, since Crysis only uses two cores, it would have the same performance of dual-core and quad-core of the same speed.
zoku88 said:It's too bad that that many cores would be mostly useless for most people. Heck, 4 cores is mostly useless for most people![]()
oo Kosma oo said:I still don't wholly understand which games use multiple cores and which don't.
I'm under the assumptions that a faster clocked dual core > slow quad. For games at least.