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Thread: Core 2 Duo vs. Core 2 Quad-Overall

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    Shirley Barrett's Avatar
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    Default Core 2 Duo vs. Core 2 Quad-Overall


    I’m choosing between two Intel processors a quad core running 2.83 GHz and a dual core running 3.3 GHz. They both have an fsb of 1333 MHz but the dual is approximately 50 bucks cheaper than the quad. With and devoid of oc them which is better? For gaming and for daily employ?

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    Ken Quinnell's Avatar
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    If you typically game the Dual core will be improved. If you do Photoshop a lot or instruct then the quad will be better.Personally I sense a 2.83GHZ quad will cover quite much everything you desire to do on a computer.

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    Jimmy Jack's Avatar
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    I would obtain the quad. Future games will support multi cores. If u run vista your extra cores will be careful of other tasks. Dual core is best with games presently because of higher clocks but the dissimilarity isn’t much? Quad cores can oc to over 3.0 GHz so the dissimilarity between the 2 cpus is like a 2-5fps max. But if you don’t oc the dual core has a slight edge.

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    Shirley Barrett's Avatar
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    Thanks for the huge amount of replies. So I was just marveling how far do you imagine I can oc the quad with a stock fan and heatsink? (I am openness towards the quad). I have no experience doing oc but I’ll form it out you have to begin somewhere. And I realize there were other topics like that but those were last winter and wondered if anything distorted because technology increases faster. Thanks again.

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    Helmut Bakaitis's Avatar
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    I deduction it counts on the cooling of your case, room temperature, the exacting processor you contain, etc. but I'd be very astonished if you could hit 3.0 with the stock cooler.

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    Estelle Salmone's Avatar
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    No, Get the Quad, as still games that are not optimized for one will advantage from the other cores captivating over windows procedures.

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    Richard James's Avatar
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    3GHz on the Q9550 would be easy on the stock cooler because it’s not that distant anyways.

    I favor the quad core because I tend to do a lot even when I am playing a game. It’s good to be able to alt+tab further than TF2 to check the internet and open some other programs then alt+tab back in without it still slowing down.

    Occasionally I will run my anti-virus scan, have some IE7s open and a few other programs while playing TF2 and it just continues going. I have a Q660 OCed to 3GHz BTW.

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    Alex Proyas's Avatar
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    Get a quad since after a while your service tab will obtain obstruct quite badly particularly under vista. The extra cores that are not "working" can be careful of the background service and let the other cores think on game.

    Keep in mind all review done is on a fresh install windows with most service turned off and the dual core excels. In real life you wouldn’t turn all service off and reinstall windows each time you play game! Do you?

    Plus the novel 45nm quad don’t overclock as bad they go quite high as well. So there isn’t a main gap in between dual and quad core.

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    Johanna Pigott's Avatar
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    A somewhat lower clocked quad will break higher clocked duals yet in non-quad optimized games, contrary to conservative wisdom. It takes around 200+ MHz dissimilarity for dual to pull in front. This is due to background procedures moving to spare cores in quad, freeing 2 cores devoted for the large program.

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    Lachy Hulme's Avatar
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    Counts on the game, if it’s TF2 which is insanely CPU rigorous since it doesn't support over 1 core, then the Dual is improved. I'm going to suppose that dual you're allowing for on purchasing is the E8600; with a good air cooler you should can hit 4.5ghz which would help in many situations, particularly in today's gaming.

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