Last time I saw a P4 was from a friend and it was running a 1.7~ it would get real hot pretty quickly. A lot of hot air would come out of the ventilation holes.
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Last time I saw a P4 was from a friend and it was running a 1.7~ it would get real hot pretty quickly. A lot of hot air would come out of the ventilation holes.
Ermmm...P4 1.7s haven't been used for a long time; totally different core actually. And what ventilation holes?Quote:
Originally posted by freedonX
Last time I saw a P4 was from a friend and it was running a 1.7~ it would get real hot pretty quickly. A lot of hot air would come out of the ventilation holes.
I know they are old and are different core, but they are the last ones I've seen on heavy duty action.
THe ventilation holes.. the latop holes, the holes on the plastic, behind the heatsink
From my EXPERIENCE, ALL Athlons run hot. . .that's from my experience, flame away.
The Moblie A64's run pretty cool. My G/F has a Emachine 3000+ and after a few hours of gamming(I got to test it;) ) it was luke warm. The Pentium M's run really cool, and the P4's that are DTR's are still pretty hot. But cooling has gotten better in laptops.
I would guess that any P4C at <= 3.0GHz or a newer A64 stepping at <= 2.2GHz could be undervolted significantly at stock speeds, resulting in a much cooler CPU.
If you wanna go to the laptop sector - the Pentium M is undisputed champ of mainstream (read: not Transmeta) CPUs.
I would definitely choose a Pentium M for a laptop. Just curious how hot A64 and P4 are right now.Quote:
Originally posted by WildWeasel
If you wanna go to the laptop sector - the Pentium M is undisputed champ of mainstream (read: not Transmeta) CPUs.