Intel Core 2 Duo E4500 M0 Stepping CPU Review When Geeks Computer Parts lists Intel E4300, E4400, and E4500 within $1 difference in price ($124), I could not help to request the E4500 for a spin. Intel E4500 is with new M0 stepping rather than previous L2 stepping. The new stepping has lower range of CPU voltage (Vcore). Since not many reviews are out with this particular processor, I thought it would be interesting to find out how the new stepping differs from the old. http://www.madshrimps.be/gotoartik.php?articID=629 |
Enjoyed the review. Seems like you just about can't go wrong with any of the C2Ds. I personally am waiting to test an E4600 on an ASRock Conroe865PE motherboard. I believe that the 12 multi will match up perfectly with that board. The board has a FSB limit at or near 300 and with the higher multi speeds in excess of 3.0GHz should be attainable...paired up with some TCCD or BH-5, that should make for some interesting comparisons to newer chipsets. I am also very interested in finding out more about this: A spreadsheet with built-in Macro that calculates VID locations depending on varies default vcore to the desire increase. I know most enthusiasts will use motherboards that will have at least some sort of vcore increment, but most low end boards don't and some PC users including myself are "cheap" or "challenging" enough not to have one. This table will sure come in handy. I will leave a link at our forum for those who are interested in keeping a copy; many thanks to the guy who wrote the table. Is a link available? |
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Not for me...I'm I doing something wrong here? Reefa_Madness, you do not have permission to access this page. This could be due to one of several reasons: Your user account may not have sufficient privileges to access this page. Are you trying to edit someone else's post, access administrative features or some other privileged system? If you are trying to post, the administrator may have disabled your account, or it may be awaiting activation. I guess I'll have to get Keith Suppe to email me a copy. :) |
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Perhaps there is a minimum post count to access that area? |
Sidney attached the file in our secure forums, moved it to the public area, it should work now, check his original post:) http://www.madshrimps.be/vbulletin/157535-post3.html |
Thank you, jmke,...it does indeed work now. |
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1 Attachment(s) Actually, this is the one that I had in mind... Specs per a random news article that I googled (Overclock3D.net) In October, Intel will launch the entry-level Core 2 Duo E4600 processor with 2.4GHz frequency, 2MB L2 cache, 800MHz FSB and a price of US$133. The previous E4500 will drop from US$133 to US$113, while E4400 and 4300 fade out the market, added the sources. Your picture of a 4600, with the 512KB cache and that week 23 of 06 date is very interesting...must be a real early sample. :D |
Interesting indeed, especially it came from China with $RMB 420 price stated in the article. :) Exchange rate as of late RMB$ 7.60 to US$1. |
If my math works out correctly, that's 420/7.6 = 55.26 USD. That doesn't seem to be the same proc as the recently released E4600, nor the same line of procs as the one you just reviewed, does it? |
SL9R5....I think not. Sidney, I think you're trying to mess with me. :) http://processorfinder.intel.com/ "sSpec Number: SL9R5 (example = SL77R)Product Order Code The sSpec number entered does not match an Intel® processor. Please check that the number was entered correctly and try again." |
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Are the new MO stepping & L2 stepping both compatible with these pin mods? Are the new MO default voltages lower than 1.35V? Are these valid/correct pin mods as well for E2160, E2180, E2200, and the E6600, E6750? ---------------------------------------------------- Quote:
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We did that with E4400 also. http://www.madshrimps.be/?action=getarticle&articID=610 And, the use of kitchen alum foil and AS5 for "glue" or "hold down". http://www.madshrimps.be/vbulletin/f...-review-36540/ |
The use of Notebook Hardware Control is nice but it is not without flaw on desktop. It disables Windows XP power scheme 'powercfg' in windows registry. It took me hours to find this out when powercfg locks on only "scheme 0" other power schemes 1,2,3,4 and 5 are disabled. It came to my attention when WinDVD power scheme could not be used. |
Hey all - I preformed an OC to 266 FSB and it did not pass stability test (blue screen). I came here and got the volt spreadsheet. When I put in my stock voltage (1.185) and my desired voltage it shows me that picture... I connect the ones it says connect and I hide the ones that are 'hidden land' with some tape right? When I tried that, it booted but the FSB was back down to 200mhz. I just undid all mods and it passed stability... Can anyone help me? |
so after you did the mod, and removed it, you can now OC to 266 with stability? |
No..Sorry the wording is off... It is stable at its stock speed of 200mhz. When I did an OC to 266 it got unstable, so I tried the volt mod and it just booted back at 200mhz... So I just undid all mods and it is stock again. I would like to keep it at 266mhz stable but I need a small voltage increase to do so. I got that spreadsheet (earlier in this thread) and I followed instructions for an increase. What I need to know is, what does 'Hidden Land' mean? On the sheet it shows pins to be connected and then some maroon colored pins called 'hidden land'. Do i just cover those up with some electrical tape? Edit - I would really like to see a picture of the chip with the mod done or a schmatic of the mod so I know im doing the right thing. The spreadsheet does not have a 1.185 volt setting either |
in Excel 2007 that macro doesn't seem to work :/ |
2 Attachment(s) Don't have MSoffice2007; works in MSoffice XP and MSoffice 2003. 2003 Excel converts to 2007; see attach error. Anyway, the attached Excel is in 2007, see if it works. Nope, can't upload with .xlsx from Excel 07. |
Yeah Im not seeing it... But those pictures you posted are correct for my chip? If they are I will give it another go this afternoon and see if it wants to work. Thanks, Chris |
Yes, the photos I just uploaded are based on 1.185 default and kicks up to 1.350. Let us know if you can get to 266FSB. You may want to use CPUID version 1.41 to check CPU voltage. |
1 Attachment(s) I dont know why I couldnt get that picture.. When I enter 1.1875 as default (closest) to go up to 1.35, I get this picture...Wish I could do what you did too so I could see it. I will connect those two pins tonight and redo the 266fsb mod and report my results. |
Something is not right ..... I am getting the same you have also after you posted yours. Yeah, let us know what you read from CPUID. |
1 Attachment(s) Ok guys... I just got home...heres the CpuID straight off CPUZ. As far as I can tell - I can try the 1.1750, 1.8750 and 1.20 and see which works? What do you think? |
Turn off Speedstep until you are done ocing; check CPUID again. You have a 6x multi on the screen. |
I got 2900mhz at 11x multi. Only issue, when I try every combo of volt mod I previously listed - there is no voltage increase and the FSB resets its self to 200mhz. I am going to leave it alone at this point, and get a new wolfbane chip when it comes out in a couple months. Thanks all, Chris |
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Stange that it didn't auto detect the 11x before or did it? What changed, to make it stable at that FSB do you think? Once you are done you can / should re-enable speedstep. There is no reason for the system to have to run constantly now at full speed...when it doesn't need to. ------------------------------------- Is the aluminum foil some of you all used having any problem? I was thinking about getting a pen, but AL foil seems easy to remove. You just used standard Arctic Silver 5 not the adhesive version, right? ----------------------------- I ordered my E4400 about a month b-4 the M0's came out. I got the L2 version. The Gigabyte board has no V-Core adjustment only FSB and a few of the memory settings. I was a little disappointed that I have only been able to run it at 190 FSB to get it stable enough to run OCCT, Prime 95, etcetera for hours. PC Wizard & OCCT list V-Core at 1.28 Volts at idle. I think my default is 1.325 although all I see on the retail box is 1.35 max. Temperatures with both cores at 100% run at 50-51 degrees C with the affordable Cooler Master HS/fan; BIOS is flashed to most recent. If the processor was yours what would you all set your voltage to, b4 OCing? I'd like to reach 275 FSB or more, 300 FSB would be a great bonus (Bios allows up to 350 FSB). -What would you consider too much voltage for the pin mod? -If my default Voltage is 1.325 then is that the number I should keep in mind as far as how much I pin mod up to or should I think of the 1.28V which the programs are reading as the starting point? -I don't mean as far as the spread sheet calculation is concerned just in terms of how much voltage is too much? Do I consider a 1.45 Volts as just that 1.45 Volts; or as the 1.40 Volts or less that it is likely to be and reported by CPU-Z and other programs? |
E4400 is tested here http://www.madshrimps.be/?action=getarticle&articID=610 This CPU requires 1.55v to get to 3.27Ghz; 1.4v @3Ghz and 1.38 with vdroop, down to 1.35 during heavy load. Stock Cooler can handle 1.4v at 3Ghz easily. |
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I read the articles at Tom's Hardware...and I know that they are a paler shadow of the tech site they used to be but this line.... "We can't really recommend running a 65-nm processor at a voltage this high anyway, since we can't rule out the possibility that the core could be damaged beyond repair over the course of time due to electron migration. Simply put, you run the risk that the conducting paths inside the CPU could literally be ablated and thus destroyed by ion migration. The result is that one day, the computer suddenly shuts down and will never start up again with that CPU. We only ran our CPU at these speeds for a short while to determine its performance at these settings. On the other hand, some models may very well run at such high speeds without even needing the slightest core voltage tweak." They have this Caveat EVERY TIME they OVERVOLT To 1.4Volts & ABOVE. Even though I think this statement is overly cautious, I was looking for personal thoughts....like "as a general rule I never go beyond 1.## volts on a chip I want to keep for three years or more" (that kind of thing). I haven't got my OC foundation fully formed yet. |
1.4v at BIOS here running 3Ghz on E4400 daily use because of vdroop on that particular motherboard. In fact, vdroop is built into the design to prevent sudden power surge when CPU process drops. The same on E4500, 1.4v at 3.2Ghz. I too keep my CPU way over 4 years. :) Understanding the law of diminishing return is always a good thing (virtual). :) |
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Okay, under the condition you mentioned, it should work only if your mb supports 266FSB CPU. What MB do you have? |
Gigabyte 8I865GME-775-RH, yes it supports 266Mhz processors. It has them listed on the Gigabyte's mobo product page and specifically mentions they are supported. There is also a special setting in the BIOS if the processor is a default 266Mhz...It kept prompting me that it detected a C2Duo processor and asked if I wanted to enable this 266 feature. Tried it once for S4ITs & Giggles on the unmodded E4400 but had to reset. The BIOS Allows adjustment from 100 - 350 FSB. |
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