Thanks for reassuring.... just want to hear what payturr has to say
No problem - I understand your concern and apprehension.
On a Dell Optiplex 755 I changed the E2210 to a Q9550 (Quad core) and also increased the RAM to 4 GBs.
Subsequently I installed Windows 8 Pro 64-bit (upgraded Vista) and upgraded the RAM to 8 GBs (the motherboard limit). No other changes. The performance is incredible!
To further satisfy yourself, check your motherboard specs. and the specs of your particular computer. As long as you stay within the same LGA 775 socket you will do fine.
LGA 775 isn't a chipset, it's a socket. I'm assuming you're on a machine made by an OEM like Dell or HP, so no, you probably can't - they lock down on that to prevent users from changing the CPU. You have to ensure your BIOS supports it.
On my Dell I upgraded from a Core 2 Duo E6750 (LGA 775) to a Core 2 Quad Q9550 (LGA 775).
So your board supported it, doesn't mean his board supports him switching from a Pentium to a C2D. My dad owns a Gateway with a Pentium E2160 & it only supports that one CPU.
So your board supported it, doesn't mean his board supports him switching from a Pentium to a C2D. My dad owns a Gateway with a Pentium E2160 & it only supports that one CPU.
LGA 775 isn't a chipset, it's a socket. I'm assuming you're on a machine made by an OEM like Dell or HP, so no, you probably can't - they lock down on that to prevent users from changing the CPU. You have to ensure your BIOS supports it.
Thanks for reassuring.... just want to hear what payturr has to say
No problem - I understand your concern and apprehension.
On a Dell Optiplex 755 I changed the E2210 to a Q9550 (Quad core) and also increased the RAM to 4 GBs.
Subsequently I installed Windows 8 Pro 64-bit (upgraded Vista) and upgraded the RAM to 8 GBs (the motherboard limit). No other changes. The performance is incredible!
To further satisfy yourself, check your motherboard specs. and the specs of your particular computer. As long as you stay within the same LGA 775 socket you will do fine.