On Tue, 14 Jun 2005 06:57:51 GMT, "Lee Waun" <(E-Mail Removed)> wrote:
>After years of being a loyal Intel user I have finally left them. Having
>read this group and comp.sys.intel for years now it was pretty clear that
>Intel has fallen far behind AMD in quality and performance in thier
>processors.
>
>Anyway I just replaced my aging Pentium 4 with a brand new AMD64 Athlon. I
>wanted a machine that was upgradeable and had the future of 64 bits built in
>it and so I chose the AMD 64 3500+ CPU for the 939 socket.
>
>It is on a Nforce4 chipset motherboard. It says it has Dual channel memory.
>However when I got the system home it was running in single channel. The
>machine has 1 gig of memory which I should hope is enough for now. I changed
>the memory to dual channel but I am just wondering.
>
>Just how much performance if any would I have lost by keeping the machine is
>single channel mode or would I be better off having it in single channel
>mode istead of switching it to Dual channel mode?
The performance difference is maybe hard to see in most applications but if
you run some tests with a benchmark prog like Sisoft's Sandra, it'll be
obvious in measured bandwidth. There's no advantage to single channel so
why not just leave it in dual.
>So far this AMD machine is real nice and I am very happy with it. It runs as
>cool as my old Northwood Pentium 4 did.
Have you checked that Cool 'n' Quiet is working? It should idle at ~1GHz
clock speed and ramp up quickly as required. I'd make sure you have the
latest AMD driver from
http://www.amd.com/us-en/Processors/...1_9706,00.html
installed, which is quite recent, make sure Cool 'n' Quiet is enabled in
BIOS Setup and in WinXP's Power Options Control Panel, set it to "Minimal
Power Management".
--
Rgds, George Macdonald