F5F Stay Refreshed Hardware Desktop This platform is genuinely looking back in time.

This platform is genuinely looking back in time.

This platform is genuinely looking back in time.

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163
08-12-2025, 07:15 AM
#1
Was wondering if it's true, (and if that's responsible) for what is going on with LGA775 machines in the PC market. Just watched latest PhilsComputerLab video where he is saying that LGA775 is becoming "next big thing for retro PC community". So I searched my local used PC market and yeah, Core 2 Duo and Core 2 Quad machines that were available widely just a year ago are now hard to find. Are the Core 2 Duo/Quad machines really getting scarce in other places? Though in Ebay Core 2 Quad CPU-s are not very pricy yet, their more decent motherboards are?
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Irontaildragon
08-12-2025, 07:15 AM #1

Was wondering if it's true, (and if that's responsible) for what is going on with LGA775 machines in the PC market. Just watched latest PhilsComputerLab video where he is saying that LGA775 is becoming "next big thing for retro PC community". So I searched my local used PC market and yeah, Core 2 Duo and Core 2 Quad machines that were available widely just a year ago are now hard to find. Are the Core 2 Duo/Quad machines really getting scarce in other places? Though in Ebay Core 2 Quad CPU-s are not very pricy yet, their more decent motherboards are?

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ZenaKing
Junior Member
40
08-13-2025, 01:47 AM
#2
I believe it varies depending on your viewpoint. For me, Socket 478 and Socket 775 remain beyond practical retrofit, too outdated for real value. Likely because those of us like this aren’t interested, so prices haven’t risen high enough yet.
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ZenaKing
08-13-2025, 01:47 AM #2

I believe it varies depending on your viewpoint. For me, Socket 478 and Socket 775 remain beyond practical retrofit, too outdated for real value. Likely because those of us like this aren’t interested, so prices haven’t risen high enough yet.

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NikoMash
Senior Member
335
08-13-2025, 05:18 AM
#3
I have a vintage setup running a Core 2 Quad Q9400. It came from my mom after she upgraded her motherboard to a Core i3 4130. If someone offered to buy it, I’d be happy to pass it along. It’s more of a nostalgic piece for me—just sitting quietly until I can bring it to a recycling center. Most LGA 775 boards only support PCI and PCIe connections, no LSA or AGP. There’s a printer port, which might work with old joysticks, but the required Windows versions probably won’t fit. While retro hardware is great for older games, it’s rarely needed for modern titles from the late 2000s. Most of those can still run on today’s systems. LGA 775 sits in a gray area—enough old enough to play some classics, but too outdated for anything new. In another decade or so, people might need that kind of gear just to run older games like Half Life or Crysis, but right now it’s fine with Windows 11 and most setups.
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NikoMash
08-13-2025, 05:18 AM #3

I have a vintage setup running a Core 2 Quad Q9400. It came from my mom after she upgraded her motherboard to a Core i3 4130. If someone offered to buy it, I’d be happy to pass it along. It’s more of a nostalgic piece for me—just sitting quietly until I can bring it to a recycling center. Most LGA 775 boards only support PCI and PCIe connections, no LSA or AGP. There’s a printer port, which might work with old joysticks, but the required Windows versions probably won’t fit. While retro hardware is great for older games, it’s rarely needed for modern titles from the late 2000s. Most of those can still run on today’s systems. LGA 775 sits in a gray area—enough old enough to play some classics, but too outdated for anything new. In another decade or so, people might need that kind of gear just to run older games like Half Life or Crysis, but right now it’s fine with Windows 11 and most setups.

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Tango599
Member
165
08-20-2025, 05:47 PM
#4
Does it have its own forum or Discord channel? That feels quite old-school...
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Tango599
08-20-2025, 05:47 PM #4

Does it have its own forum or Discord channel? That feels quite old-school...

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OKNK
Member
231
08-21-2025, 07:52 PM
#5
My system runs a Core2 Quad with 6GB DDR2 RAM on Windows 10 and works perfectly as a DLNA media server. I have my movies stored there and can stream them to the TV.
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OKNK
08-21-2025, 07:52 PM #5

My system runs a Core2 Quad with 6GB DDR2 RAM on Windows 10 and works perfectly as a DLNA media server. I have my movies stored there and can stream them to the TV.

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timppan9
Member
55
08-23-2025, 08:51 AM
#6
Some people like it retro, but I don’t think everyone finds them that engaging. Core 2 PCs are essentially older computers, though they’re much slower than today’s models.
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timppan9
08-23-2025, 08:51 AM #6

Some people like it retro, but I don’t think everyone finds them that engaging. Core 2 PCs are essentially older computers, though they’re much slower than today’s models.

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ERKKIN
Member
218
08-23-2025, 09:32 AM
#7
When compared to some members of our community, I view it as outdated... Of course, retro means old computers that are no longer in use.
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ERKKIN
08-23-2025, 09:32 AM #7

When compared to some members of our community, I view it as outdated... Of course, retro means old computers that are no longer in use.

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Charliemc909
Posting Freak
898
08-23-2025, 11:47 AM
#8
I still have a Core2 Quad Q6600 running at 3.0GHz in my HTPC. It handles 1080p videos and web browsing smoothly. I also own a Q9550 @ 3.4GHz elsewhere, though it isn’t currently used. It’s sufficiently fast for most tasks on a secondary machine, but I have several more powerful systems available.
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Charliemc909
08-23-2025, 11:47 AM #8

I still have a Core2 Quad Q6600 running at 3.0GHz in my HTPC. It handles 1080p videos and web browsing smoothly. I also own a Q9550 @ 3.4GHz elsewhere, though it isn’t currently used. It’s sufficiently fast for most tasks on a secondary machine, but I have several more powerful systems available.

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tiger67
Junior Member
9
08-23-2025, 12:08 PM
#9
Core2 works well with Windows XP 32-bit. I haven’t tried it yet, but newer systems often lack support for older Windows versions.
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tiger67
08-23-2025, 12:08 PM #9

Core2 works well with Windows XP 32-bit. I haven’t tried it yet, but newer systems often lack support for older Windows versions.