Results for fsb in review

Articles & reviews

  • Showdown at 133 MHz FSB - Part 2, The Real McCoy*
    Wednesday 8 March 2000 – 06:00
    This time we showed no mercy. We included the good old BX-chipset and ran it at 133 MHz FSB. It had to stick up against no less than Intel's great i840-chipset and of course i820 and VIA's Apollo Pro 133A as well. The results we found are rather shocking.
  • Performance Showdown at 133 MHz FSB - The best Platform for Coppermine*
    Thursday 2 March 2000 – 06:00
    Which chipset supports Intel's latest Pentium III processors best? Is it Intel's 820 chipset with the super expensive RDRAM? Is it the same chipset, but with the cheaper SDRAM? Or might it not be VIA's Apollo Pro 133A chipset in the end? We'll show you which it is.
  • MSI Admits to FSB Overclocking*
    Thursday 22 May 2003 – 07:00
    Yesterday, THG showed in its Intel 865 test that MSI dynamically overclocks the FSB of its 865 Neo 2. The consequences that this has on the benchmarks: unrealistic results. Here's what MSI Taiwan has to say about it.
  • VapoChill Puts a Pentium 4 with 800 MHz FSB within Reach*
    Monday 24 February 2003 – 06:00
    THG shows you what kind of performance Intel's next Pentium 4 chipset, called "Canterwood," will have to offer. A Granite Bay board, a 2.26 GHz Pentium 4 and AseTek's cooling technology made it possible for us to accelerate the test system to almost 800 MHz FSB and 3.4 GHz processor clock.
  • Do More Cores Beat More Clock Speed?*
    Wednesday 8 August 2007 – 04:50 in Hardware
    Do More Cores Beat More Clock Speed? Nearly everyone who’s followed CPU technology over the past two years knows that quad cores have a distinct performance advantage in a wide variety of professional applications, because many applications are designed for multi-threading. These same read
  • Intel's 925XE: Does Beating the 1 GHz FSB Barrier Matter?*
    Tuesday 12 October 2004 – 07:00
    We managed to secure early samples of Intel's P4 Extreme Edition 925XE chipset, complete with a 1,066 MHz speed FSB. So while the 1 GHz FSB speed barrier gets beaten, our benchmark course unmasks whether or not Intel's yet-to-be launched device is really something to get excited about.
  • All Aboard! P4 with 200 MHz FSB and the i875P Dual DDR400 Chipset*
    Monday 14 April 2003 – 07:00
    With its 875/ Canterwood, Intel increases its bandwidth to 6.4 GB/s through Dual DDR400. The Pentium 4 takes off with 200 MHz Quad-FSB and declasses Rambus to the lower ranks. Serial ATA is now integrated on the ICH5, and Gigabit LAN has migrated to the Northbridge.
  • Episode II: Attack of the Chipsets - Intel 845E and 845G for 533 MHz FSB and DDR-SDRAM*
    Monday 20 May 2002 – 07:00
    Intel's second generation of DDR chipsets for the Pentium 4 makes a stand: the 845E offers support for 533 MHz FSB, and its bigger brother, the 845G, even provides an improved memory interface for DDR333 as well as integrated graphics. How do these two warriors compare to VIA's new P4X333?
  • Socket 478 Exhausted: Pentium 4 With Dual DDR500 Running At 1000 MHz FSB*
    Tuesday 12 August 2003 – 07:00
    Corsair, Kingston and OCZ Technology already supply DDR memory with clock speeds up to 500 MHz, which provides us with enough of an excuse to run the new modules through a few hoops. But in addition to a new DDR 500 MHz memory upgrade, what can the Pentium 4 do with a 1 GHz FSB?
  • The Three Musketeers: Athlon Platforms For 133 MHz FSB*
    Thursday 4 January 2001 – 06:00
    Although AMD launched Athlon processors with 133 MHz processor bus already two months ago, we are still waiting for the proper platforms. It won't be long anymore now until you will have the choice between three different chipsets for those new Athlon processors. This article is comparing AMD's 760 DDR-chipset with ALi's MaGiK1 DDR-chipset and VIA's new Apollo KT133A chipset.
  • Extreme FSB: Taking the E6750 Beyond 4 GHz*
    Wednesday 1 August 2007 – 03:12 in Hardware
    Extreme FSB: Taking the E6750 Beyond 4 GHz Intel promises noticeable performance gains from its new FSB1333 bus, currently available on Core 2 series 6x50 processors. There have been mixed results between these and same-speed FSB1066 versions, one thing is for certain: buying the latest processo
  • 500 MHz FSB? Core 2 Duo Overtakes Core 2 Extreme*
    Thursday 11 January 2007 – 03:38
    500 MHz FSB? Core 2 Duo Overtakes Core 2 Extreme Many users have reported great success overclocking the Core 2 Duo entry-level model E6300. We drove the 1.86 GHz processor to 3.4 GHz, but despite that, this model still isn't our first choice for overclocking any more.

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