Upgrade My CPU?

landscaper1

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I've got a tower with an Asus P8B75-M/CSM motherboard with an i5 CPU and 16gb of RAM. Is there any real advantage in upgrading to an i7 CPU? The i7-3770 appears to be the fastest option compatible with the P8B75-M/CSM.

Or will the upgrade from the i5 have little perceptive difference in post processing use?
 
This might interest you -


Your current CPU is pretty good - any performance increase will be expensive, and minor. This might change in the future, of course.
 
Do you have noticeable lag time now? What do you expect to gain?

I'm fixing to upgrade to an i5 from a 2 GHz AMD 9500 because of lag time and RAM problems.
Actually, I do have noticeable lag times now, but I'm also looking to the future when I expect to be working with even larger files than I am now. Maybe from a 5DS/DSr?
In that case, I'd suggest a more comprehensive upgrade to a new motherboard/CPU/memory, if not a complete new PC.
I concur. You do not want to throw good money after bad. I have never seen hardware cheaper then it is now. Great time to upgrade!
 
I've got a tower with an Asus P8B75-M/CSM motherboard with an i5 CPU and 16gb of RAM. Is there any real advantage in upgrading to an i7 CPU? The i7-3770 appears to be the fastest option compatible with the P8B75-M/CSM.

Or will the upgrade from the i5 have little perceptive difference in post processing use?
 
I've got a tower with an Asus P8B75-M/CSM motherboard with an i5 CPU and 16gb of RAM. Is there any real advantage in upgrading to an i7 CPU? The i7-3770 appears to be the fastest option compatible with the P8B75-M/CSM.

Or will the upgrade from the i5 have little perceptive difference in post processing use?

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Landscaper
Get i7-3770K if you can and overclock it a little. Your speed will double overall.
The keyword is "overall". Not all operations will be faster of course.
You can't overclock on a B75 motherboard.

I'm also highly suspect of your speed doubling claims, but not worth hashing out given the OP can't do it anyway.

 
He has a 3470. As I stated earlier, single core performance is 10% better and multicore performance is 40% better with the 3770, while over clocking could take single core performance up to 30%.
Who has 3470? OP has i5-2400s.
 
You can't overclock on a B75 motherboard.
Why not? Can't reach Bios?
The B75 chipset can't adjust multipliers AFAIK, and BCLK overclocking is often very limited due to stability issues.
In the manual section 2-13. AI section. CPU ratio. And also voltage.

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IF I DON'T RESPOND TO YOUR POST AFTER YOU RESPONDED TO MINE THAT MEANS YOU ARE ON MY IGNORE LIST OR I DON'T HAVE THE ANSWER.
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You can't overclock on a B75 motherboard.
Why not? Can't reach Bios?
The B75 chipset can't adjust multipliers AFAIK, and BCLK overclocking is often very limited due to stability issues.
In the manual section 2-13. AI section. CPU ratio. And also voltage.
Let's settle this whole debate. I am not interested in overclocking. Period.

--
Landscaper
Somebody once told me "If you want to take a dump you need to push" :-D

--
IF I DON'T RESPOND TO YOUR POST AFTER YOU RESPONDED TO MINE THAT MEANS YOU ARE ON MY IGNORE LIST OR I DON'T HAVE THE ANSWER.
Photography Director for Whedonopolis.com
 
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You can't overclock on a B75 motherboard.
Why not? Can't reach Bios?
The B75 chipset can't adjust multipliers AFAIK, and BCLK overclocking is often very limited due to stability issues.
In the manual section 2-13. AI section. CPU ratio. And also voltage.
Only Z series motherboards support overclocking, per intel chipset limitations.

The manual for his P8B75-M doesn't have a section 2-13, so not sure what you are looking at.
 
You can't overclock on a B75 motherboard.
Why not? Can't reach Bios?
The B75 chipset can't adjust multipliers AFAIK, and BCLK overclocking is often very limited due to stability issues.
In the manual section 2-13. AI section. CPU ratio. And also voltage.
To be more specific, I've been unable to find an actual user of the Asus P8B75-M/CSM who's been able to adjust the CPU multipliers UPWARD, which is the point of the exercise.

http://www.overclock.net/t/1505184/can-i-overclock-with-a-asus-p8b75-m-csm-with-a-3570k

http://www.tigerdirect.com/applicat...dsPerPage=5&body=REVIEWS#CustomerReviewsBlock

Remember, the OP has the CSM version.

Hmmm...maybe a simple BIOS flash from the plain-M version would work. I've heard of a few cases where the mobo makers were able to circumvent Intel's OC restrictions. But since the OP is absolutely not interested, this is a moot point.
 
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I agree on the with the comment on 16 GB. My PC has "only" 12 GB and I regularly processed 100+ MB files with no apparent lag time. I have looked into upgrading to 16 GB multiple times but the conclusion was always the same: No Need.
16 GB is already overkill for most people. Unless you actually see your computer run out of memory, I would not spend the money. You can see how much RAM you are using in task manager under the performance tab. Unless you are frequently above 90% used, the extra RAM will go unused and offer no performance gains.
 
You can't overclock on a B75 motherboard.
Why not? Can't reach Bios?
The B75 chipset can't adjust multipliers AFAIK, and BCLK overclocking is often very limited due to stability issues.
In the manual section 2-13. AI section. CPU ratio. And also voltage.
Only Z series motherboards support overclocking, per intel chipset limitations.

The manual for his P8B75-M doesn't have a section 2-13, so not sure what you are looking at.
Maybe you should look again.


Scroll to 2-13.
 

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