The BEST bang for the $$$
http://www.zipzoomfly.com/jsp/ProductDetail.jsp?ProductCode=80849&affiliate=pricegrabber
http://www.zipzoomfly.com/jsp/ProductDetail.jsp?ProductCode=80849&affiliate=pricegrabber
The BEST bang for the $$$
http://www.zipzoomfly.com/jsp/ProductDetail.jsp?ProductCode=80849&affiliate=pricegrabber
Be serious, that's 2 P4b chips sharing a fsb. That's the new definition of bandwidth starved.
Be serious, that's 2 P4b chips sharing a fsb. That's the new definition of bandwidth starved.
even if it is dual core(almost). Guess it would make some people very happy tho. Esp if they were considering something like this! Such a deal :lol: :lol: :lol:OK You've talked me out of it. Prob wouldn't be happy with something that is slower than I already haveeven if it is dual core(almost). Guess it would make some people very happy tho. Esp if they were considering something like this! Such a deal :lol: :lol: :lol:
Please,
The 805 WILL OC very well with the right motherboard and what you considered "crippled" may just be that it requires a higher Vcore to attain an 800FSB or higher. Still waiting for an official benchtest/review but it will certainly be a better buy and performer than ANY of the smithfield cores(stock spd) if it can hit an 800FSB @ 4Ghz. Watercool it and it's highly likely you can go even further. Yes, this is speculation but in the OC CPU thread's Denster has already gotten his 805 up to 3.73Ghz air cooled! If a 905 is released with the 65nm process and 2x2Mb L2 cache, look out. It'll OC even better. If it OC's higher than an 800FSB, it may give most other dual cores a serious run for the $$ regardless of manufacturer and WILL be an Incredible Value. Time will tell.
Really?????!!!!!! Try this on for size and be sure to see ALL the Pent. D's :lol:
http://support.asus.com/cpusupport/cpusupport.aspx?SLanguage=en-us&model=P5N32-SLI%20Deluxe
That's just one board and if I look @ my own Abit AW8's CPU support list, I bet I'll find it there too.
FYI, Most high end board's from a quality manufacturer using an nForce4, Intel 945, 955, & 975 chipset WILL support the 805 with nothing more than a bios update IF that. Chances are they'll support the 905 when it arrives as well.
I'd try the 805 on my own rig(see sig) but it's too much of a hassle to tear apart my H2O setup just for testing. The 905 may be a different story.
I hope this may clarify some doubts as to the capability of the Pent D 805 Processor 
another thread in THG someone overclocked it pretty well - cant remember the details but it was better then any prescott dual core offering.

Where the 805 will shine will be if it can get close to or pass an 800FSB when OC'ed. A uATX mobo with onboard graphics will most likely NOT be for OC'ing. I'd first look for a uATX board without video, if it exists. You'll most likely have to go with an ATX board to utilize the 805's potential when OC'ed.
The Pentium D 805 is enough processor for what most of us are doing, games, movies, surfing the web... It's not like we are protecting the USA with radar systems or keeping track of everybody's bank accounts... In a big way, I would say, I would have just been happy with the 805 if I had known what I know now about the AMD X2 4400, (which is my other chip). The X2 is NOT as overclockable, though it has a bigger cache, it responds a little quicker, but the Pent 805 gives it a very close run for the money!!! And it costs about $300 less 

Well I just didGood luck finding a board the 805 is typically going to paired with that can OC.


I've been following the AMD performance curve and just want to try a Pentium system again since I like both actually. For some reason I can tolerate crashes and reboots on games but not on a HTPC which I expect to run like my refrigerator, quiet and gives me no s...t along the way.Congrats Denster, those are amazing numbers on stock air. Did you have to bump vcore to get there?


