Apollo11
Posts: 24082
Joined: 6/7/2001 From: Zagreb, Croatia Status: offline
|
Hi all, quote:
ORIGINAL: Mr.Frag My *#1* problem with AMD is not the CPU, it's the lack of a thermal cutoff in the CPU itself that would save the system in the event of a $3 fan failure. An Intel chip will throttle back and save itself from destruction. An AMD chip will rely on the motherboard's thermal protection to save itself. The Thermisters used for this purpose on motherboards have a reaction time of over a second and varience of up to 25%. You will not know if you have a crappy one until your CPU is burnt to a crisp. In past 12+ years I had just one AMD CPU (AMD 120 MHz DX4 486 - Intel converted to Pentium 1 CPU by then but that CPU was plagued with problems and I wanted to avoid it at any cost - especially those first P75 and P90 models). In this time I also had more than 20 Intel CPUs (starting with DX2 486 and now with P4 3.0 GHz). Although current brand new AMD CPUs look great and finally offer something new and exciting (something Intel is lacking right now) the past AMD record is not a good one. I am IT professional and I have never ever seen a broken Intel CPU in past 12+ years. Unfortunately I saw plenty of dead AMD ones (all kinds). Like Raymond says the thermal problem was serious one and I have witnessed many sad sad stories regarding that problem (BTW, those affected I knew never successfully reclaimed their loss at stores here because warranty was claimed to be void - thermal events were not covered due to excessive numbers of affected and burned CPUs). Therefore I never ever recommended any of AMD CPUs to my friends (when I build them my own "super PC" I use Intel). But if someone wants very fast CPUs, lower price than Intel (and can stand lots of noise from massive cooling devices) AMD is not such a bad choice after all (especially if you can afford brand new AMD CPU line)... Leo "Apollo11"
_____________________________
Prior Preparation & Planning Prevents Pathetically Poor Performance! A & B: WitW, WitE, WbtS, GGWaW, GGWaW2-AWD, HttR, CotA, BftB, CF P: UV, WitP, WitP-AE
|