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uNtOldPAIN
Athlon XP 3000+ (Barton) 2.167GHz
Athlon XP 2800+ (Barton) 2.083GHz
Athlon XP 2800+ (333MHz FSB) 2.25GHz
Athlon XP 2700+ (333MHz FSB) 2.167GHz
Athlon XP 2600+ (333MHz FSB) 2.083GHz
Athlon XP 2600+ 2.13GHz
Athlon XP 2500+ (Barton) 1.83GHz
Athlon XP 2400+ 2.00GHz
Athlon XP 2200+ 1.80GHz
Athlon XP 2100+ 1.73GHz
Athlon XP 2000+ 1.67GHz
Athlon XP 1900+ 1.60GHz
Athlon XP 1800+ 1.53GHz
Athlon XP 1700+ 1.47GHz
Athlon XP 1600+ 1.40GHz
Athlon XP 1500+ 1.33GHz

I was looking for this the other day....thought we might as well have them here just incase someone is looking for it icon_rolleyes.gif
ldonyo
I thought we had that posted around here somewhere. Oh, well. At least your post is up to the minute, Pain! icon_biggrin.gif
Jason
The speed rating's are compared to a 1.4 Athlon, nothing to do with the Pentium 4.

Just to remind people :wink:
Mandark
The P4 is maturing. The ultra high speed memory busses and dual channel controllers can be FULLY utilized by the P4.

Granite Bay and the future designs are going to make things VERY difficult for AMD's Hammer line. Megaherts DO matter with high bandwidth memory and busses.

The P4 is a fine processor indeed and will scale nicely to match super fast hi-bandwidth memory architectures.
ldonyo
Here's a link to a pdf on AMD's site that not only shows the actual MHz rating for each chip, but the different part numbers for the TBred and Palomino cores, as well.

http://www.amd.com/us-en/assets/content_ty...n_Rev03_ENG.pdf

If you want a better overclocking chip look for a TBredB core, which will have a 'U' as the 4thcharacter from the right in the part number. The TBredB runs on a lower core voltage than the TBredA and thus produces less heat.
ntruax
The TBred B's end with the letter B. Like AIUGB The A's end with an A. Like RIRGA etc...
ldonyo
That's fine if you get a look at the stepping number on the chip, but most places don't let you know what stepping you're getting. They might, however, put the AMD part number, which is why I posted the link. icon_biggrin.gif
ntruax
It's a nice link icon_biggrin.gif It's all a little confusing. I think it's actually the 4th letter from the right that would indicate a B. The 2600's and 2700's (not sure about the higher ones) have a K though and they're B's. There's too many different ones. icon_confused.gif
ldonyo
You're absolutely right, Nate! icon_redface.gif I fixed my post to reflect the fact that I am now awake. :wink: The TBredA and B thing mostly applies to the 266MHz FSB chips.
fxr91
QUOTE
The speed rating's are compared to a 1.4 Athlon, nothing to do with the Pentium 4.


[sarcasm]
Of course it is icon_rolleyes.gif :P
[/sarcasm]

icon_biggrin.gif
ntruax
QUOTE
QUOTE
The speed rating's are compared to a 1.4 Athlon, nothing to do with the Pentium 4.


[sarcasm]
Of course it is icon_rolleyes.gif :P
[/sarcasm]

icon_biggrin.gif


icon_lol.gif icon_lol.gif icon_lol.gif icon_lol.gif icon_lol.gif
mbeeston
t-bred a's are limited to 2200+'s no other cpu was made with that core.. here.. i got one =)
fxr91
QUOTE
t-bred a's are limited to 2200+'s no other cpu was made with that core.. here.. i got one =)


ahem, the early tbred core 1700's and 1800's were Alpha cores as well icon_smile.gif
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