• Welcome to TechPowerUp Forums, Guest! Please check out our forum guidelines for info related to our community.

How does Xeon E 5645 2.4 GHz compare to i-7 2600K 3.4 GHz ?

dan99t

New Member
Joined
Jan 19, 2012
Messages
28 (0.01/day)
I bought Dell workstation T-7500 with Xeon E 5645 2.4 GHz with other configuration like RAM, HDD, Win-7, etc same as Dell XPS 8300 desktop with i-7 2600K 3.4 GHz

But I am finding that workstation seems slower than desktop.

So is it the processor that is slow or something else ?

Percentage wise How much slower it should be ?

They want extra $ 500.00 to upgrade to Xeon X5650, 2.66 GHz. Would that be as good as i-7 2600K 3.4 GHz or better?
 
Last edited:

Aquinus

Resident Wat-man
Joined
Jan 28, 2012
Messages
13,147 (2.95/day)
Location
Concord, NH, USA
System Name Apollo
Processor Intel Core i9 9880H
Motherboard Some proprietary Apple thing.
Memory 64GB DDR4-2667
Video Card(s) AMD Radeon Pro 5600M, 8GB HBM2
Storage 1TB Apple NVMe, 4TB External
Display(s) Laptop @ 3072x1920 + 2x LG 5k Ultrafine TB3 displays
Case MacBook Pro (16", 2019)
Audio Device(s) AirPods Pro, Sennheiser HD 380s w/ FIIO Alpen 2, or Logitech 2.1 Speakers
Power Supply 96w Power Adapter
Mouse Logitech MX Master 3
Keyboard Logitech G915, GL Clicky
Software MacOS 12.1
I bought Dell workstation T-7500 with Xeon E 5645 2.4 GHz with other configuration like RAM, HDD, Win-7, etc same as Dell XPS 8300 desktop with i-7 2600K 3.4 GHz

But I am finding that workstation seems slower than desktop.

So is it the processor that is slow or something else ?

Percentage wise How much slower it should be ?

What do you mean it runs slower? At what points does it slow down and is the HDD configuration (and hardware being used,) the same as the 2600 system? Clock-for-clock they're about the same (3.4ghz with 4 cores vs 2.4ghz on 6 cores.) With the speed of the platform, I doubt the CPU is what is making your workstation go slow. Maybe more information about both of the rigs would be helpful.

They want extra $ 500.00 to upgrade to Xeon X5650, 2.66 GHz. Would that be as good as i-7 2600K 3.4 GHz or better?
Upgrade the CPU yourself? That CPU costs only about 300 USD more if you buy the CPU by itself which puts their price at 200 USD over retail.
 
Joined
Oct 1, 2010
Messages
2,361 (0.48/day)
Location
Marlow, ENGLAND
System Name Chachamaru-IV | Retro Battlestation
Processor AMD Ryzen 9 5900X | Intel Pentium II 450MHz
Motherboard ASUS ROG STRIX X570-F Gaming | MSI MS-6116 (Intel 440BX chipset)
Cooling Noctua NH-D15 SE-AM4
Memory 32GB Corsair DDR4-3000 (16-20-20-38) | 512MB PC133 SDRAM
Video Card(s) nVIDIA GeForce RTX 4070 FE | 3dfx Voodoo3 3000
Storage 1TB WD_Black SN850 NVME SSD (OS), Toshiba 3TB (Storage), Toshiba 3TB (Steam)
Display(s) Samsung Odyssey G5 27" @ 1440p144 & Dell P2312H @ 1080p60
Case SilverStone Seta A1 | Beige box
Audio Device(s) Creative Sound Blaster AE-7 (Speakers), Creative Zen Hybrid headset | Sound Blaster AWE64
Power Supply EVGA Supernova 750 G2 | 250W ASETEC
Mouse Roccat Kone Air| Microsoft Serial Mouse v2.0A
Keyboard Vortex Race3 | Dell AT102W
Software Microsoft Windows 11 Pro | Microsoft Windows 98SE

Aquinus

Resident Wat-man
Joined
Jan 28, 2012
Messages
13,147 (2.95/day)
Location
Concord, NH, USA
System Name Apollo
Processor Intel Core i9 9880H
Motherboard Some proprietary Apple thing.
Memory 64GB DDR4-2667
Video Card(s) AMD Radeon Pro 5600M, 8GB HBM2
Storage 1TB Apple NVMe, 4TB External
Display(s) Laptop @ 3072x1920 + 2x LG 5k Ultrafine TB3 displays
Case MacBook Pro (16", 2019)
Audio Device(s) AirPods Pro, Sennheiser HD 380s w/ FIIO Alpen 2, or Logitech 2.1 Speakers
Power Supply 96w Power Adapter
Mouse Logitech MX Master 3
Keyboard Logitech G915, GL Clicky
Software MacOS 12.1
Second result on google.

http://www.cpubenchmark.net/cpu.php?cpu=Intel+Xeon+E5645+@+2.40GHz

The Xeon is about 30-40% slower than the i7.

At work I've run WPrime on a server with dual Xeon E5520 and my overclocked 3820 @ 4.75ghz runs faster than this dual-processor platform at stocks speeds it would be close, but we're talking about Nehelem vs Sandy Bridge which sports IPC improvements as well. I wouldn't go with a higher clocked CPU unless you need it. A multi-threaded benchmark would show where Xeon's shine.

(Xeons also support buffered and ECC memory, which adds to memory latencies.)
 
Joined
Oct 1, 2010
Messages
2,361 (0.48/day)
Location
Marlow, ENGLAND
System Name Chachamaru-IV | Retro Battlestation
Processor AMD Ryzen 9 5900X | Intel Pentium II 450MHz
Motherboard ASUS ROG STRIX X570-F Gaming | MSI MS-6116 (Intel 440BX chipset)
Cooling Noctua NH-D15 SE-AM4
Memory 32GB Corsair DDR4-3000 (16-20-20-38) | 512MB PC133 SDRAM
Video Card(s) nVIDIA GeForce RTX 4070 FE | 3dfx Voodoo3 3000
Storage 1TB WD_Black SN850 NVME SSD (OS), Toshiba 3TB (Storage), Toshiba 3TB (Steam)
Display(s) Samsung Odyssey G5 27" @ 1440p144 & Dell P2312H @ 1080p60
Case SilverStone Seta A1 | Beige box
Audio Device(s) Creative Sound Blaster AE-7 (Speakers), Creative Zen Hybrid headset | Sound Blaster AWE64
Power Supply EVGA Supernova 750 G2 | 250W ASETEC
Mouse Roccat Kone Air| Microsoft Serial Mouse v2.0A
Keyboard Vortex Race3 | Dell AT102W
Software Microsoft Windows 11 Pro | Microsoft Windows 98SE
I'm thinking his Xeon is Nehalem-based, considering the difference in speed. So what I said still stands, it feels slower because it IS slower.
 

Aquinus

Resident Wat-man
Joined
Jan 28, 2012
Messages
13,147 (2.95/day)
Location
Concord, NH, USA
System Name Apollo
Processor Intel Core i9 9880H
Motherboard Some proprietary Apple thing.
Memory 64GB DDR4-2667
Video Card(s) AMD Radeon Pro 5600M, 8GB HBM2
Storage 1TB Apple NVMe, 4TB External
Display(s) Laptop @ 3072x1920 + 2x LG 5k Ultrafine TB3 displays
Case MacBook Pro (16", 2019)
Audio Device(s) AirPods Pro, Sennheiser HD 380s w/ FIIO Alpen 2, or Logitech 2.1 Speakers
Power Supply 96w Power Adapter
Mouse Logitech MX Master 3
Keyboard Logitech G915, GL Clicky
Software MacOS 12.1
I'm thinking his Xeon is Nehalem-based, considering the difference in speed. So what I said still stands, it feels slower because it IS slower.

You wouldn't feel that kind of difference between those two CPUs though. I think it's disk I/O and that the drive on the 2600k system is most likely faster. Honestly, just booting into Windows and using basic applications (internet browser, video, etc,) (excluding the fact that I now use SSDs,) but the 3820 launches applications off of my raid just as fast as my Phenom II 940 did. I would not be surprised one bit if this 100% an I/O issue and not a CPU issue. 2.4ghz 6-core isn't slow (plus there is a small turbo there iirc.)
 

dan99t

New Member
Joined
Jan 19, 2012
Messages
28 (0.01/day)
Both have WD 500 GB 7200 RPM ( No SSD, but would SSD make a huge difference ? )

Both have 12 GB RAM except Workstation has ECC. Does that slow it down ?

Xeon is Westmere
 
Joined
Aug 12, 2005
Messages
754 (0.11/day)
Processor Intel Core i7 4790K
Motherboard Asus Z97i Plus
Cooling Antec Kuhler 620 + Gentle Typhoon 3000RPM
Memory A-DATA XPG V2 DDR3-2400 16GB
Video Card(s) MSI GTX 970 Gaming 4G
Storage Samsung 850 Ev0 500GB
Display(s) Qnix QX2710 @100Hz
Case Silverstone SG13
Audio Device(s) Onboard
Power Supply Silverstone SX-500LG
Mouse Logitech G602
Keyboard Corsair K70 Lux
Software Windows 10 Pro
Benchmark Scores Not interested in benchmarks
Both have WD 500 GB 7200 RPM ( No SSD, but would SSD make a huge difference ? )

Both have 12 GB RAM except Workstation has ECC. Does that slow it down ?

Xeon is Westmere
SSD would make a BIG difference. nuf said.
 
Joined
Jul 21, 2008
Messages
5,174 (0.90/day)
System Name [Daily Driver]
Processor [Ryzen 7 5800X3D]
Motherboard [Asus TUF GAMING X570-PLUS]
Cooling [be quiet! Dark Rock Slim]
Memory [64GB Corsair Vengeance LPX 3600MHz (16GBx4)]
Video Card(s) [PNY RTX 3070Ti XLR8]
Storage [1TB SN850 NVMe, 4TB 990 Pro NVMe, 2TB 870 EVO SSD, 2TB SA510 SSD]
Display(s) [2x 27" HP X27q at 1440p]
Case [Fractal Meshify-C]
Audio Device(s) [Steelseries Arctis Pro]
Power Supply [CORSAIR RMx 1000]
Mouse [Logitech G Pro Wireless]
Keyboard [Logitech G512 Carbon (GX-Brown)]
Software [Windows 11 64-Bit]
Joined
Aug 12, 2005
Messages
754 (0.11/day)
Processor Intel Core i7 4790K
Motherboard Asus Z97i Plus
Cooling Antec Kuhler 620 + Gentle Typhoon 3000RPM
Memory A-DATA XPG V2 DDR3-2400 16GB
Video Card(s) MSI GTX 970 Gaming 4G
Storage Samsung 850 Ev0 500GB
Display(s) Qnix QX2710 @100Hz
Case Silverstone SG13
Audio Device(s) Onboard
Power Supply Silverstone SX-500LG
Mouse Logitech G602
Keyboard Corsair K70 Lux
Software Windows 10 Pro
Benchmark Scores Not interested in benchmarks
Joined
Jul 21, 2008
Messages
5,174 (0.90/day)
System Name [Daily Driver]
Processor [Ryzen 7 5800X3D]
Motherboard [Asus TUF GAMING X570-PLUS]
Cooling [be quiet! Dark Rock Slim]
Memory [64GB Corsair Vengeance LPX 3600MHz (16GBx4)]
Video Card(s) [PNY RTX 3070Ti XLR8]
Storage [1TB SN850 NVMe, 4TB 990 Pro NVMe, 2TB 870 EVO SSD, 2TB SA510 SSD]
Display(s) [2x 27" HP X27q at 1440p]
Case [Fractal Meshify-C]
Audio Device(s) [Steelseries Arctis Pro]
Power Supply [CORSAIR RMx 1000]
Mouse [Logitech G Pro Wireless]
Keyboard [Logitech G512 Carbon (GX-Brown)]
Software [Windows 11 64-Bit]
says someone who's not using one. :rolleyes:

:roll:

Ya but I can read, research and come to educated conclusions. The logic of, you dont own it so you dont know, is absolutely fucking retarded.
 
Joined
Aug 12, 2005
Messages
754 (0.11/day)
Processor Intel Core i7 4790K
Motherboard Asus Z97i Plus
Cooling Antec Kuhler 620 + Gentle Typhoon 3000RPM
Memory A-DATA XPG V2 DDR3-2400 16GB
Video Card(s) MSI GTX 970 Gaming 4G
Storage Samsung 850 Ev0 500GB
Display(s) Qnix QX2710 @100Hz
Case Silverstone SG13
Audio Device(s) Onboard
Power Supply Silverstone SX-500LG
Mouse Logitech G602
Keyboard Corsair K70 Lux
Software Windows 10 Pro
Benchmark Scores Not interested in benchmarks
:roll:

Ya but I can read, research and come to educated conclusions. The logic of, you dont own it so you dont know, is absolutely fucking retarded.
but in this case, it is true.

even at the same sequential speed, SSDs feel much faster. reviews don't necessarily reveal that aspect. ask anyone who's using a SSD, can they go back to a regular HDD and use that PC for few minutes. you'll get your answer.
 
Joined
Jul 21, 2008
Messages
5,174 (0.90/day)
System Name [Daily Driver]
Processor [Ryzen 7 5800X3D]
Motherboard [Asus TUF GAMING X570-PLUS]
Cooling [be quiet! Dark Rock Slim]
Memory [64GB Corsair Vengeance LPX 3600MHz (16GBx4)]
Video Card(s) [PNY RTX 3070Ti XLR8]
Storage [1TB SN850 NVMe, 4TB 990 Pro NVMe, 2TB 870 EVO SSD, 2TB SA510 SSD]
Display(s) [2x 27" HP X27q at 1440p]
Case [Fractal Meshify-C]
Audio Device(s) [Steelseries Arctis Pro]
Power Supply [CORSAIR RMx 1000]
Mouse [Logitech G Pro Wireless]
Keyboard [Logitech G512 Carbon (GX-Brown)]
Software [Windows 11 64-Bit]
but in this case, it is true.

even at the same sequential speed, SSDs feel much faster. reviews don't necessarily reveal that aspect. ask anyone who's using a SSD, can they go back to a regular HDD and use that PC for few minutes. you'll get your answer.

All an ssd does is increase read and write times.. thus all it effects is load times. (In simple terms).

You have some screwy logic, if I go from a ferrari to a cadillac then ya its gonna seem slow. But it still performs the task of driving at a perfectly acceptable rate.
 
Joined
Aug 12, 2005
Messages
754 (0.11/day)
Processor Intel Core i7 4790K
Motherboard Asus Z97i Plus
Cooling Antec Kuhler 620 + Gentle Typhoon 3000RPM
Memory A-DATA XPG V2 DDR3-2400 16GB
Video Card(s) MSI GTX 970 Gaming 4G
Storage Samsung 850 Ev0 500GB
Display(s) Qnix QX2710 @100Hz
Case Silverstone SG13
Audio Device(s) Onboard
Power Supply Silverstone SX-500LG
Mouse Logitech G602
Keyboard Corsair K70 Lux
Software Windows 10 Pro
Benchmark Scores Not interested in benchmarks
All an ssd does is increase read and write times.. thus all it effects is load times. (In simple terms).

that's the most retarded thing i've heard whole year!
 
Joined
Sep 21, 2011
Messages
499 (0.11/day)
System Name Multipurpose desktop
Processor AMD Phenom II x6 1605T @ 3.75Ghz , NB @ 2.5
Motherboard Gigabyte 990FXA-UD3 (rev 1.0)
Cooling Prolimatech Megahalems Rev. C, 2x120mm CM Blademaster
Memory Corsair Vengeance LP (4x4GB) @1666Mhz 9-9-9-20-24 1T
Video Card(s) ASUS Strix R7-370 4GB OC
Storage 2x WD Caviar Black 500GB Sata III in RAID 0
Display(s) Acer S211HL 21.5" 1920x1080
Case Cooler Master Centurion 534+, 3x 120mm CM Sickle Flow
Power Supply Seasonic X650 Gold
Software Windows 7 x64 Home Premium SP1
that's the most retarded thing i've heard whole year!

He's right, SSDs have increased read/write, across all r/w block sizes. This is where your 'feel' comes in; mechanical HDDs have decent sustained r/w but the r/w speed on small blocks of data is extremely slow compared to SSDs. The faster small block r/w on an SSD creates your faster 'feel'.

Why argue about something you obviously don't know enough about?
 

Bo$$

Lab Extraordinaire
Joined
May 7, 2009
Messages
5,656 (1.04/day)
Location
London, UK
System Name Desktop | Server
Processor Intel i7 2700k @ 4.6GHZ | AMD 5350 @ 2500MHZ
Motherboard Asus P7Z77-V Pro | Asus AM1I-A
Cooling Corsair H60v2 | Stock Air
Memory Crucial Ballistix 2x8GB CL8 1600MHZ | Corsair Vengence 2x4GB CL9 1600MHZ
Video Card(s) EVGA GTX 1060 6GB | PNY GTX 750Ti
Storage Samsung 840 EVO 250GB + 4TB WD Red | 2x Seagate Barracuda 2TB
Display(s) Samsung S27D390H + Asus VE276Q | Headless
Case Fractal Design R5 | CM Elite 110
Audio Device(s) Asus Xonar D1 w/Otone Stilo 5.1 and Creative Fatal1ty headset
Power Supply EVGA Supernova 850 G2| Corsair CX430M
Mouse Razer Imperator 2012
Keyboard Corsair K90
Software Windows 7 SP1 X64 | Ubuntu 16.04LTS
SSD lower access times vs HDD, speed has little relevence in realworld speed :)
 
Joined
Feb 7, 2006
Messages
738 (0.11/day)
Location
Austin, TX
System Name WAZAAM!
Processor AMD Ryzen 3900x
Motherboard ASRock Fatal1ty X370 Pro Gaming
Cooling Kraken x62
Memory G.Skill 16GB 3200 MHz
Video Card(s) EVGA GeForce GTX 1070 8GB SC
Storage Micron 9200 Max
Display(s) Samsung 49" 5120x1440 120hz
Case Corsair 600D
Audio Device(s) Onboard - Bose Companion 2 Speakers
Power Supply CORSAIR Professional Series HX850
Keyboard Corsair K95 RGB
Software Windows 10 Pro
hey Dan,

I know exactly what you mean. I have my i5-2500k (4.6Ghz) at home and a T5500 with an x5660 (6-cores at 2.8Ghz) here at the office. The i5 feels a lot more snappy. Now, when I start loading up the VMs and such the more cores are a pretty big advantage.

Does that T7500 have just a single E5645 or two?

What does it have as far as graphics are concerned? Dual cards?

How long have you had it?
 
Joined
Feb 7, 2006
Messages
738 (0.11/day)
Location
Austin, TX
System Name WAZAAM!
Processor AMD Ryzen 3900x
Motherboard ASRock Fatal1ty X370 Pro Gaming
Cooling Kraken x62
Memory G.Skill 16GB 3200 MHz
Video Card(s) EVGA GeForce GTX 1070 8GB SC
Storage Micron 9200 Max
Display(s) Samsung 49" 5120x1440 120hz
Case Corsair 600D
Audio Device(s) Onboard - Bose Companion 2 Speakers
Power Supply CORSAIR Professional Series HX850
Keyboard Corsair K95 RGB
Software Windows 10 Pro
Both have WD 500 GB 7200 RPM ( No SSD, but would SSD make a huge difference ? )

Both have 12 GB RAM except Workstation has ECC. Does that slow it down ?

Xeon is Westmere


Sorry for the two quick posts.

The ECC memory is a percent or two slower than non-ecc so you're not going to feel that difference.

Upgrading the hard drive would definitely help make it feel quicker. When I first booted up this T5500 it was running on a single 500GB drive just like yours. Played with it a bit before I realized the other 3 drives weren't being used.

Now it's set up in a 4-drive RAID10 and it definitely made a noticeable performance difference. Going SSD would help though.

Point of Interest: All OCZ drives are on sale on NewEgg and have an additional 15% discount via discount code. A 120GB drive ends up under $100 after all discounts & $30 rebate.
 
Joined
Feb 7, 2006
Messages
738 (0.11/day)
Location
Austin, TX
System Name WAZAAM!
Processor AMD Ryzen 3900x
Motherboard ASRock Fatal1ty X370 Pro Gaming
Cooling Kraken x62
Memory G.Skill 16GB 3200 MHz
Video Card(s) EVGA GeForce GTX 1070 8GB SC
Storage Micron 9200 Max
Display(s) Samsung 49" 5120x1440 120hz
Case Corsair 600D
Audio Device(s) Onboard - Bose Companion 2 Speakers
Power Supply CORSAIR Professional Series HX850
Keyboard Corsair K95 RGB
Software Windows 10 Pro
SSD lower access times vs HDD, speed has little relevence in realworld speed :)

I swear, last post. (3 in a row is ridiculous).

Here's a great article on Storage Review: http://www.storagereview.com/articles/200003/20000318Conclude.html

It's from way back in they day when they first started using IOMeter. They discuss how Access Time has a huge impact on hard drive performance.

Let's examine a few examples from the theoretical side:

Drive A has a 13 millisecond access time and a 20 MB/sec transfer rate. Drive B has a 13 millisecond access time and a 30 MB/sec transfer rate. In all other cases, the two units are identical. Just how much faster is drive B than A? Let's take an easy example, SR's IOMeter Database Access Pattern. In this particular case (which isn't far off from typical workstation usage), Drive A's average I/O operation will take 13 milliseconds + (8k block / 20,000k transfer rate) = 13.4 milliseconds. Drive B, with its superior transfer rate, would take 13.26 milliseconds to complete the transaction. Not nearly as significant as we initially thought, is it?

Let's take the example one step further with a look at STR in an asymptotic nature. That's right, assume drive B possesses an infinitely fast transfer rate. In this case, Drive B bests drive A by a 13ms vs. 13.4 ms margin. That's right, a 3% margin.

As BO$$ said, speed is of little concern. The difference in random access time is immense (well over an order of magnitude difference). Anytime you do something in a program that hasn't been loaded from memory it's pulling from the hard drive. Most times these are small transfers that may be fragmented or just separate in nature.

If you can access these files immediately the transfer rate is secondary and and everything will feel more responsive because it *is* more responsive.
 
Joined
Aug 12, 2005
Messages
754 (0.11/day)
Processor Intel Core i7 4790K
Motherboard Asus Z97i Plus
Cooling Antec Kuhler 620 + Gentle Typhoon 3000RPM
Memory A-DATA XPG V2 DDR3-2400 16GB
Video Card(s) MSI GTX 970 Gaming 4G
Storage Samsung 850 Ev0 500GB
Display(s) Qnix QX2710 @100Hz
Case Silverstone SG13
Audio Device(s) Onboard
Power Supply Silverstone SX-500LG
Mouse Logitech G602
Keyboard Corsair K70 Lux
Software Windows 10 Pro
Benchmark Scores Not interested in benchmarks
He's right, SSDs have increased read/write, across all r/w block sizes. This is where your 'feel' comes in; mechanical HDDs have decent sustained r/w but the r/w speed on small blocks of data is extremely slow compared to SSDs. The faster small block r/w on an SSD creates your faster 'feel'.

Why argue about something you obviously don't know enough about?
he said increased TIMES, when it is increased SPEED. seriously? you are exactly saying what i am saying and still you take his side?

besides, the faster feeling is not in your head, it is really there. whole system it way snappier with an SSD. not everything is measurable by a suite of tests.
 

eidairaman1

The Exiled Airman
Joined
Jul 2, 2007
Messages
40,435 (6.59/day)
Location
Republic of Texas (True Patriot)
System Name PCGOD
Processor AMD FX 8350@ 5.0GHz
Motherboard Asus TUF 990FX Sabertooth R2 2901 Bios
Cooling Scythe Ashura, 2×BitFenix 230mm Spectre Pro LED (Blue,Green), 2x BitFenix 140mm Spectre Pro LED
Memory 16 GB Gskill Ripjaws X 2133 (2400 OC, 10-10-12-20-20, 1T, 1.65V)
Video Card(s) AMD Radeon 290 Sapphire Vapor-X
Storage Samsung 840 Pro 256GB, WD Velociraptor 1TB
Display(s) NEC Multisync LCD 1700V (Display Port Adapter)
Case AeroCool Xpredator Evil Blue Edition
Audio Device(s) Creative Labs Sound Blaster ZxR
Power Supply Seasonic 1250 XM2 Series (XP3)
Mouse Roccat Kone XTD
Keyboard Roccat Ryos MK Pro
Software Windows 7 Pro 64
ya Know to insult someone is not Nice at all Anusha. So grow the piss up


Btw SSDs do have advantage of no moving parts they however rely on a Clock Tick and latencies to determine performance so Some SSDs are faster than Other SSDs. Thing is the Xeon Based Platform, Im assuming is still 1366 vs 1155 and plus the Xeon being ran at 2.4 GHz vs a 2600K at 3.4 GHz. My only thinking is the Server Parts come at a slower tick rate so they can be sold at a certain TDP level so they can be put in cluster/blade servers where core density means more than clock speed which in turn true multi thread environments (Server Market) the Xeon Shines. If You could bump the Xeon clock rate up and then compare you might get your answer.

Hear this too, TPU test rig is still 1366 based and hasnt changed because the numbers are way too similar to justify an "Upgrade/sidegrade" to 1155
 
Joined
Aug 12, 2005
Messages
754 (0.11/day)
Processor Intel Core i7 4790K
Motherboard Asus Z97i Plus
Cooling Antec Kuhler 620 + Gentle Typhoon 3000RPM
Memory A-DATA XPG V2 DDR3-2400 16GB
Video Card(s) MSI GTX 970 Gaming 4G
Storage Samsung 850 Ev0 500GB
Display(s) Qnix QX2710 @100Hz
Case Silverstone SG13
Audio Device(s) Onboard
Power Supply Silverstone SX-500LG
Mouse Logitech G602
Keyboard Corsair K70 Lux
Software Windows 10 Pro
Benchmark Scores Not interested in benchmarks
ya Know to insult someone is not Nice at all Anusha. So grow the piss up
i apologize. i guess my crossfire woes are making me miserable.

but i still am holding my grounds. an SSD would make your PC experience so much better. besides, why downgrade the CPU *paying more $$$* for more performance when he can simply put in an SSD?
 

eidairaman1

The Exiled Airman
Joined
Jul 2, 2007
Messages
40,435 (6.59/day)
Location
Republic of Texas (True Patriot)
System Name PCGOD
Processor AMD FX 8350@ 5.0GHz
Motherboard Asus TUF 990FX Sabertooth R2 2901 Bios
Cooling Scythe Ashura, 2×BitFenix 230mm Spectre Pro LED (Blue,Green), 2x BitFenix 140mm Spectre Pro LED
Memory 16 GB Gskill Ripjaws X 2133 (2400 OC, 10-10-12-20-20, 1T, 1.65V)
Video Card(s) AMD Radeon 290 Sapphire Vapor-X
Storage Samsung 840 Pro 256GB, WD Velociraptor 1TB
Display(s) NEC Multisync LCD 1700V (Display Port Adapter)
Case AeroCool Xpredator Evil Blue Edition
Audio Device(s) Creative Labs Sound Blaster ZxR
Power Supply Seasonic 1250 XM2 Series (XP3)
Mouse Roccat Kone XTD
Keyboard Roccat Ryos MK Pro
Software Windows 7 Pro 64
Ok only thing I can think of is that Read and Write times to SSDs are faster, IDK by how much though because the other factor is Consumer Level SSDs are running off SATA bus and not directly off the Pci Express bus
 
Joined
Aug 12, 2005
Messages
754 (0.11/day)
Processor Intel Core i7 4790K
Motherboard Asus Z97i Plus
Cooling Antec Kuhler 620 + Gentle Typhoon 3000RPM
Memory A-DATA XPG V2 DDR3-2400 16GB
Video Card(s) MSI GTX 970 Gaming 4G
Storage Samsung 850 Ev0 500GB
Display(s) Qnix QX2710 @100Hz
Case Silverstone SG13
Audio Device(s) Onboard
Power Supply Silverstone SX-500LG
Mouse Logitech G602
Keyboard Corsair K70 Lux
Software Windows 10 Pro
Benchmark Scores Not interested in benchmarks
Ok only thing I can think of is that Read and Write times to SSDs are faster, IDK by how much though because the other factor is Consumer Level SSDs are running off SATA bus and not directly off the Pci Express bus
i believe it only affect RAID systems?
 

Aquinus

Resident Wat-man
Joined
Jan 28, 2012
Messages
13,147 (2.95/day)
Location
Concord, NH, USA
System Name Apollo
Processor Intel Core i9 9880H
Motherboard Some proprietary Apple thing.
Memory 64GB DDR4-2667
Video Card(s) AMD Radeon Pro 5600M, 8GB HBM2
Storage 1TB Apple NVMe, 4TB External
Display(s) Laptop @ 3072x1920 + 2x LG 5k Ultrafine TB3 displays
Case MacBook Pro (16", 2019)
Audio Device(s) AirPods Pro, Sennheiser HD 380s w/ FIIO Alpen 2, or Logitech 2.1 Speakers
Power Supply 96w Power Adapter
Mouse Logitech MX Master 3
Keyboard Logitech G915, GL Clicky
Software MacOS 12.1
Ok only thing I can think of is that Read and Write times to SSDs are faster, IDK by how much though because the other factor is Consumer Level SSDs are running off SATA bus and not directly off the Pci Express bus

There is also practically no "seek time" since all an SSD has to do is select a segment of memory where a hard drive has to physically move the head across a rotating platter, where you then have to wait for the part of the media move under the head to where the stored data is. This makes SSDs able to perform more (vastly more) I/O operations per second, so assuming a regular HDD could hit the same read speeds as an SSD (which they don't), the SSD would benefit with smaller files where HDDs would benefit larger files. HDDs still benefit larger files because of the capacity and price per amount of storage, but for booting and running applications, SSDs fly and benefit you with the things you use on a regular basis. Honestly, it was like night and day going from just my RAID-5 with 3x 1tb drives to RAID-0 with two Force GTs on SATA 6gb for a boot device.
 
Top