F5F Stay Refreshed Hardware Desktop Consider refreshing your old HTPC with an AMD AM3 processor. Could a CPU upgrade be beneficial?

Consider refreshing your old HTPC with an AMD AM3 processor. Could a CPU upgrade be beneficial?

Consider refreshing your old HTPC with an AMD AM3 processor. Could a CPU upgrade be beneficial?

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cookiedough909
Posting Freak
782
05-08-2016, 04:42 AM
#1
I'm reviving an old HTPC built for my parents about ten years ago. The hard drive stopped working roughly two years back. I considered swapping it with an SSD and updating the Windows 10, but thought upgrading the motherboard and graphics card might be overkill since it's so outdated. It ran fine with the new SSD, though. Key details: case, AMD Athlon II X3 440, Crucial MX500, 16GB DDR3 RAM. It likely won't handle many games anymore unless kids use it. I'm thinking about upgrading to a better AM3—would be worth it? I'm open to spending up to $100, maybe a Phenom II X6s. I don’t know much about the latest AM3s, but how much does performance improve from 1075t to 1100t?
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cookiedough909
05-08-2016, 04:42 AM #1

I'm reviving an old HTPC built for my parents about ten years ago. The hard drive stopped working roughly two years back. I considered swapping it with an SSD and updating the Windows 10, but thought upgrading the motherboard and graphics card might be overkill since it's so outdated. It ran fine with the new SSD, though. Key details: case, AMD Athlon II X3 440, Crucial MX500, 16GB DDR3 RAM. It likely won't handle many games anymore unless kids use it. I'm thinking about upgrading to a better AM3—would be worth it? I'm open to spending up to $100, maybe a Phenom II X6s. I don’t know much about the latest AM3s, but how much does performance improve from 1075t to 1100t?

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Mareli_
Junior Member
14
05-11-2016, 03:12 AM
#2
Phenom II X6 offers the top performance for that socket. The 1100T seems only about 10% superior to the 1075T, which isn’t a significant difference in most cases.
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Mareli_
05-11-2016, 03:12 AM #2

Phenom II X6 offers the top performance for that socket. The 1100T seems only about 10% superior to the 1075T, which isn’t a significant difference in most cases.

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DaBoringPiggi
Member
50
05-12-2016, 07:51 PM
#3
Review a fm2-configuration too—they're affordable used units. Even an older A8/A10 APU can provide a notable performance lift without requiring a dedicated PCIe graphics card versus your current rig. Tested 1075T/1100T against A10 5800K...
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DaBoringPiggi
05-12-2016, 07:51 PM #3

Review a fm2-configuration too—they're affordable used units. Even an older A8/A10 APU can provide a notable performance lift without requiring a dedicated PCIe graphics card versus your current rig. Tested 1075T/1100T against A10 5800K...

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Gamers_Widow
Junior Member
6
05-17-2016, 02:41 AM
#4
I’m not sure about the Zosma (x4) unlockable cores. The Phenom II X4 970 uses the X6 Thuban platform, but details on core unlockability aren’t clear.
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Gamers_Widow
05-17-2016, 02:41 AM #4

I’m not sure about the Zosma (x4) unlockable cores. The Phenom II X4 970 uses the X6 Thuban platform, but details on core unlockability aren’t clear.

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Bladestorm117
Junior Member
26
05-17-2016, 10:19 AM
#5
These platforms are very affordable and suitable for small tasks. They also perform well and stay efficient.
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Bladestorm117
05-17-2016, 10:19 AM #5

These platforms are very affordable and suitable for small tasks. They also perform well and stay efficient.

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pandaomega_98
Junior Member
5
05-17-2016, 07:24 PM
#6
Thanks for the idea. I’ll check it out. Honestly, if I were replacing the motherboard, I’d likely spend a bit more and opt for a newer system.
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pandaomega_98
05-17-2016, 07:24 PM #6

Thanks for the idea. I’ll check it out. Honestly, if I were replacing the motherboard, I’d likely spend a bit more and opt for a newer system.

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Skalarbeus
Junior Member
6
05-17-2016, 09:11 PM
#7
How much more is needed? A $50 purchase gives a solid fm2+ package and restores your memory function—though it should handle DDR3 1600 at least and dual-channel. Any alternative would require swapping to DDR4, which adds up even with a reasonable CPU and motherboard around $130 or more.
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Skalarbeus
05-17-2016, 09:11 PM #7

How much more is needed? A $50 purchase gives a solid fm2+ package and restores your memory function—though it should handle DDR3 1600 at least and dual-channel. Any alternative would require swapping to DDR4, which adds up even with a reasonable CPU and motherboard around $130 or more.

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JOEtheLEMON
Junior Member
7
05-30-2016, 08:23 AM
#8
Sure, an X6 processor is quite powerful for a budget motherboard.
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JOEtheLEMON
05-30-2016, 08:23 AM #8

Sure, an X6 processor is quite powerful for a budget motherboard.

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ColSpeed
Member
197
06-01-2016, 01:57 PM
#9
That's correct, but I might also need to purchase RAM. The Asus board only supported 16GB of DDR3 1333. I think I likely have some extra DDR3 from my i7, though probably only around 4GB of DDR3 1600. Maybe an AM4 design is still on the horizon for this situation.
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ColSpeed
06-01-2016, 01:57 PM #9

That's correct, but I might also need to purchase RAM. The Asus board only supported 16GB of DDR3 1333. I think I likely have some extra DDR3 from my i7, though probably only around 4GB of DDR3 1600. Maybe an AM4 design is still on the horizon for this situation.

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SpT_rain
Junior Member
24
06-04-2016, 12:56 PM
#10
The M4A88T supports DDR3 1866. Values above 1333 are treated as overclocks, and running DDR3 1333 at 1600 or more typically performs well.
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SpT_rain
06-04-2016, 12:56 PM #10

The M4A88T supports DDR3 1866. Values above 1333 are treated as overclocks, and running DDR3 1333 at 1600 or more typically performs well.

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