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I am looking to upgrade my ANUS.
Here is my setup.

Asus P4B266-C
P4 1.6a (overclocked to 2.13)
512 PC-2100 DDR
60GB 7200
20GB 7200
Lite-On CD-RW

I have been working on some larger projects and would like to get a litte more power from my system. What would be my best option for an upgrade?

I believe the Asus P4B266-C will accept up to a Intel 2.4 CPU and another 512 DDR. Is this correct and if so is this the best option. Is there a certain version of that CPU I should use?

Any ideas would be appreciated.

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Opus2000 Fri, 04/11/2003 - 19:17

Hey man!

Sorry about not getting back to you. I get about 150 emails a day(I know I know....some get lost!)

Anyhue, the P4B266 can take any of the highest 400Mhz P4's, which I believe is a 2.6Ghz CPU!

Also adding another 512 of RAM isn't needed but it's nice. If you only have one stick of 512 than you're golden and you can get another 512 for under $70.00 and have the 1GB!!!!

HTH

Opus

anonymous Sat, 04/12/2003 - 19:20

Wow freaky. I just got on to ask the same question. My sys is aprox the same except for different drives. I have the northwood CPU. I believe that one had 512 on the cache.

Anyway I was curious what you meant by more power. My problem is that Plugins drag me to dropouts.

Overclocking my machine tends to get it to blue screen now and again.

Not completely sure what I need but Opus's post suggests the direction to go is up the processor?

Not completely clear on what is the limiting factor for plugins - CPU speed or memory

Mark

anonymous Sat, 04/12/2003 - 20:20

Thanks for the reply Opus! You are correct I can go up to a 2.6. After reading a little about this processor I am noticing there are several version available. I believe there is a B & C. Which one would I want to get? Any difference? Looks like they are being overclock to 3.0+. SWEET!

Yodermr... I want more processing power for plugins. My setup is rock stable and it takes a lot before I notice a drag on my PC. However, I am doing some larger projects and would like the headroom.

Looks like I can upgrade to a 2.6 and another 512 ddr for well under $300. Hmmmm.......

anonymous Sun, 04/13/2003 - 05:29

I use Sonar. Long time Cakewalk user from version 1.3. I have tried others but the comfort level has always outweighed other package pros. Rather spend time recording than learning how to run the software.

Please post your decision on the upgrade, I am hestitantly following. Again, rather spend time recording than troubling shooting new issues.

Mark

Opus2000 Sun, 04/13/2003 - 08:19

Hey guys

Yes, upgrading the CPU will indeed boost your performace in plug in counts and general performance. You want an even better performance along with the CPU upgrade, get yourself a 40GB WD 8MB Cache drive for your OS and see an unbelievable difference there as well!

The best way to upgrade is CPU and the 8MB Cached OS Drive! Seriously! It helps tremendously. No matter what application you are using.

Also, XP is more responsive than 2K to be honest. 2K is nice and stable indeed but XP takes it to the next level. It will only be more responsive if you do the tweaks from my guide too. XP comes fully loaded and will bog down some of the performance areas of the OS in regards to audio applications.

Me, I'm now waiting for "Longhorn" which is supposed to be released late 2004/early 2005. That will be an amazing OS from has been leaked out on it.

In regards to applications, whatever suits your needs and whatever one makes you comfortable is the way to go.

SX and Nuendo do not have a heavy learning curve in any way. Very straight forward.

Logic is the one that has the havy learning curve!

Peace

Opus

anonymous Wed, 02/11/2004 - 04:08

I hate digging up old threads, but that's what the search engine is for right??
This thread pretty much describes where I am at, and I have a few questions I'd like to expound(sp) on.
My system is like the one originally posted, except I have never overclocked it. If I were to overclock it to 2.1, how would that compare to upgrading to the 2.6GHz(unclocked)?? would I be in the same ballpark??
Second, why would I want the 8MB cache on the OS harddrive, when I am streaming from my audio disk??

mjones4th Thu, 02/12/2004 - 04:39

OC'ing to 2.1, and OEMing to 2.6 would be semi-comparable in performance. An Athlons are excellent for OC'ing. But there are drawbacks which I'm sure you're aware of.

8MB cache is good for OS drives, because the OS (and any apps running) has to make frequent calls to the HDD during normal operation. 8MB means that a larger protion of what the OS is looking for is more readily and quickly accessible. Meaning better performance.

I think I heard Late 2004-Early 2005 for Longhorn?

Mitzelplik

anonymous Tue, 06/13/2006 - 06:34

Just Checking in...

I'm still running my Opus Anus.....

P4:1.6 not O'clocked
ASUS P4B266
1 gig Ram
1 40G WD OS HDD
1 160G WD Audio HDD
1 160G WD Video HDD

Sonar5 Producer.........

She's still ticking, performance is fair..... I'm not into hundred track territory..can't come up with that much original material....... But complete 32 audio track mixes are done with less than 50% CPU usage...