Hi all,
Processors aren't normally my area and googling around keeps producing irrelevent results so I figured i'd ask this here.
I'm wondering if I can swap the onboard processor with the same processor but at a higher ghz..
Onboard my PC is a 3.2Ghz Pentium 4 and onboard this uhh 'pile of parts' for a machine is a 3.4Ghz P4..
I read before that different processors have different pins/sockets etc but will these be the same since they are essentially both Pentium 4's except with a different clock/ghz thing?
Yes I know Pentium 4's are dated.
Sure you can. I don't know if the higher GHz one produces any more heat. You should find out the model of the 3.4GHz one and Google it. Some may be a 478 socket while some may be a 775 socket.
some p4s are 478 which are the pins on the cpu and the 775 p4s are the one with little holes in, check the MB models online and it will tell u etc
I suspect that they are the same motherboards, since the PC's are quite similar. The 3.4Ghz is in the Dell Dimension 5000 and my 3.2 in the Dimension 5150
Dimension 5000
5150
None the less i'll check tommorow before I do anything
yer they will be both the same mate
it might be the same Processor line, but not exactly the same model.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_Int...processors
When I think of a higher clocked CPU, It think it's just working a bit harder. As long as you have proper cooling, it shouldn't be much of a difference.
P4s are the hottest running CPUs ever made. If you've already got a 3.4, there's no point getting a faster P4, it won't make enough difference to be worth it (8% max).
If you have a socket 775 motherboard, you may be able to get a core2 for it, although being a dell who knows what'll actually work in the thing.
(2012-08-24 22:19)Tommer Wrote: [ -> ]I suspect that they are the same motherboards, since the PC's are quite similar
It's a Dell, don't count on it. The same model number will sometimes have different motherboards depending on the age and the original spec. The same case will often have very different specs. If the cases are visibly different, there's a good chance that the motherboards will also be different.
What's not so nice about Dell is that they often reuse model numbers with a completely new generation.
Also, without the actual motherboard part number (CPU-Z or the BIOS often displays it) you never know what it actually supports and as Dell don't document their parts fully, the only way to actually know is based on others' experiences with it.