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April 24th, 2001, 05:33 PM
#1
PIII 750MHZ VS. PIII 733MHZ (100MHZ FSB vs. 133MHZ FSB)
What system do you think is more efficient ?
a system with same in HDD, RAM. But with this difference:
733MHZ(133MHZ FSB)& RAM PC133 VS. 750MHZ (100MHZ FSB) & RAM PC100
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April 24th, 2001, 05:39 PM
#2
I think it would be a tight race. But I would go 733mhz, 133mhz FSB
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April 24th, 2001, 06:14 PM
#3
"The older you get the more rules they are going to try and get you to follow. You just gotta keep on livin man! L-I-V-I-N!" ~~~ Wooderson
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April 24th, 2001, 07:44 PM
#4
Registered User
I don't think it would be a tight race at all. The 733 MHz system has it for sure.
Flash! Don't heckle the supervillain!
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April 25th, 2001, 02:40 AM
#5
Registered User
The one having the 733 processor, but you won't see a big difference!
The wandering Odysseus of the web.
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April 25th, 2001, 06:06 AM
#6
Registered User
If it aint broke, don't fix it....... If it's broke, buy a new one
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April 25th, 2001, 06:13 AM
#7
I didn't know they bothered to make a 750?
There you go shows how much I know.
And Control Enter STILL wont let me post a reply.
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April 25th, 2001, 06:46 AM
#8
Originally posted by scutterboy:
I didn't know they bothered to make a 750?
There you go shows how much I know.
So the users with S370 BX boards could run faster chips
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April 25th, 2001, 09:18 AM
#9
Registered User
We have a bunch of 733's at work and they're nothing but trouble. They have intermittant problems that we can't narrow down. /*Even the brilliant minds at WinDrivers have been stumped*/
Our 600 machines work MUCH better. A nagging theory that's been brewing in the back of my head a while now is that no matter what brand, a processor/bus speed always seems to work better when it's in a nice round number. Like 600, 750, or 100 FSB. (or even *GASP* 200 FSB for AMD?! )
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April 25th, 2001, 11:06 AM
#10
733 for speed, but 750 for reliability.
Death is lighter than a feather - duty heavier than a mountian.
The answer to your question is: 00110100 00110010
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April 27th, 2001, 08:44 PM
#11
Registered User
Its a no brainer, a 733MHz on a reliable mainboard such as an Asus CUV4X series. Will give you speed and reliability. If you go with the 133MHz FSB, make sure you get yourself some decent PC133 (PC150 is better) CAS2 SDRAM.
My brain went into standby mode and I can't get it to wake up, is there a BIOS patch for this?
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April 28th, 2001, 08:02 PM
#12
personaly I'd do neither and go for a 700 with PC-133 ram and clock it, then u get a lot more performance for ur money, my 700 is running at 980 at the min rock solid
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May 7th, 2001, 07:18 PM
#13
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733, but also think that dif would be negligable
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May 9th, 2001, 09:57 AM
#14
the 133fsb is better for performance but I would agree with amneal, get a 700 (100fsb)cpu and run the fsb at 133. Its not guaranteed to work but it appears that with the PIII700 it is 99% cert that it will run at 933. Mines been running at 933 solid as a rock. Has been up 24/7 for 2 weeks now running the UD software.
What do you mean its all my fault?...
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May 10th, 2001, 01:28 AM
#15
Just be sure to avoid VIA chipsets. Looking at the sound and video forums, they are mentioned more than anything as the cause of problems. Why not mate the best CPU (the 750) with the best chipset (the 440BX--I believe the i815e is just a slightly detuned, however, modernized version of the BX with 133 fsb support and UDMA-100, and overpriced at that, supports only 512 MB RAM??) with some good quality PC-100/133 SDRAM and enjoy the beauty of a reliable system that'll be plenty fast for whatever you want to do.
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