That Q6600 came in a few days ago. I swapped out the C2D with it and also added 2 more GB of 800 MHz DDR2 and a Samsung 840 SSD. All the WEI scores on Win 7 64 jumped 2 to 3 points. The CPU score went from a 5.1 to a 7.1. The 7950 boost GPU got a 7.9. I am guessing that since the Sammy 840 is running on SATA II that is the reason for the 7.1. The lowest score is the RAM @ 5.9 which isn't that bad considering the 2GB module that came with the combo is 667 MHz. The CPU, of course, is running at 1,066 MHz separate from the RAM and is running at its stock clock of 2.4 GHz. I know these scores aren't very useful but they do show the difference between a 1.8 GHz C2D and a 2.4 GHz C2Q. Running some OCCT tests with the Hyper 212 Evo, the Q6600 did quite well and never went over 60c. It does idel quite high, though, at nearly 40c on core 0. The other 3 cores idle at under 35c. As for gaming with a Q6600 + 7950 boost using PCIe 1.1 x16, I am able to run every game I have on Steam (and Origin) in 1080p with the maximum detail settings and when applicable in DX 11. This came as a bit of a surprise to me since the PC that I had just recently sold, a 3770k (OC'd to 4.5 GHz) + Sabertooth Z77 + GTX 660 SLI + 2x 8GB Corsair Vengeance was not able to max out some of these games without some noticeable stutter and framerate drop. I had always assumed it was an SLI thing but it could be that the single 7950 boost (which I did not have with that rig; I sold all those parts a few months ago for almost $1000 on ebay) is simply superior since it has 3GB of 256-bit GDDR5 vs the 2GB of 192-bit GDDR5 the GTX 660 SLI has. The fact is that I am not able to tell the difference between my old $1200 PC and this PC, which, for the CPU, motherboard and RAM only cost me less than $80. That is exactly 4x less than what the $320 3770k cost alone (I was able to sell it for $300 as a 1.5 year old used part). None of the games I tried (Saints Row 3, Tomb Raider, Far Cry 3, Payday 2, Max Payne 3, LA Noir, GTA 4, Call of Duty: BO, Hitman Abs., Biohshock Inf., Borderlands 2, Dead Island, DI Rip BF: BC2 and BF3 plus a bunch of much less demanding games such as TWD, Portal 2, GTA 3, Limbo, Bioshock 1 and 2, etc. etc.) ever dropped under 30 FPS and they were all maxed out in 1080p on a single monitor with a cap of 60 FPS. Many of these more demanding games could easily go over 60 FPS if I wanted. This should prove that an aging platform like the LGA 775 with an aging CPU like the Q6600, even at stock speed, can still handle any modern game that is thrown at it as long as you pair it with a decent GPU. It should make an awesome budget gaming rig for anyone who is happy playing in 1080p on only one screen. It also proves that the tech found on most LGA 775 motherboards such as DDR2, PCIe 1.1 and SATA II are still not as huge of bottlenecks as many people perceive them to be. I am estimating that the 7950 boost is only losing 1 or 2 FPS due to it vs if I had PCIe 3.0 x16 and less than that if I had PCIe 2.0 x16. For a single mid to high end GPU this system is the perfect blend of cheap and powerful. It is just old enough that not many people (elitists

) would consider them over newer platforms like 1155 and 1150 and powerful enough to run any new game out with perfectly acceptable framerates - if you are content with single monitor 1080p gaming @ 30-60 FPS and can live with a little extra heat produced by the 65nm, 105c TDP CPU. This system is obviously not going to win any benchmarks or even impress your 12 year old friends who would all say "you should upgrade to a hexa-core 2011 rig" or "upgrade to a $2500 4770k with a 780ti SLI" when, if you are only using a single 1080p monitor, will make little or no difference. I am perfectly content with this little rig that costs less than a a couple of new release Xbox One or PS4 games and rivals them in terms of performance. Hopefully these 775 parts will last me several years and by then I might find a crazy deal that I can't pass up on one of those 2011 hexacores and 8GB of DDR3 for under $100.
There are some drawbacks besides the obsolescence and poor upgrade potential of the platform. For one it is produces quite a bit of heat. The Hyper 212 Evo cooling my previous CPU, a 3770k, was cool to the touch even under a 100% load during stress testing. The same CPU cooler on this Q6600 runs slightly warm to the touch even at idle and heats up to low burner stove top-like temps when under full load. Also, despite it being the "G0" stepping "SLACR" revision of the Q6600 which is supposed to use less power and thus have a higher OC headroom than the original "B3" stepping, it is still using a massive near 160 watts of electricity at IDLE. When playing a demanding game it can get close to 200 watts. Of course, those idle power usage figures are when the CPU is at its stock clock speed of 2.4 GHz. If Speedstep is turned on the clock drops to around 1.5 GHz and should decrease the voltage and power consumption significantly although I am not sure by how much. It is still a power hog compared to my old 3770K and my current laptop's 3210M which both use less power combined assuming that the HD4000s are not running at full blast. Combine that with the even more power hungry HD 7950 boost and I have a very, very non-eco friendly PC that I probably have to buy carbon credits to legally use in some countries. Since I have an Ivy Bridge laptop still for all my non-gaming computing needs and only turn on the Q6600 + HD 7950 for gaming I am willing to accept the fact that it is a big fat power hungry power hog.
http://www.anandtech.com/show/2303/2