idancesafetydance
Charter Member
After receiving this for Christmas, I must say, I am much impressed with this 240 USD hex-core chip. so here's a mini-review/ my impressions
After disabling Cool-n-Quiet in my BIOS, a work around I found to fool the chip into thinking that Turbo core is disabled. I managed to bump up the frequency from 3.2Ghz up to 4.0Ghz.
I must say, this thing overclocks like a champ. I'm running it at 1.4 Volts to be on the safe side, which is still pretty low, multiplier at 18.5x, and the Bus at 217, and it is stable as can be, and at max load with a Corsair H50 cooling system, never goes beyond 56 degrees Celsius.
So, what does that mean for FSX? Alot, let's say that with my old Phenom 940 at 3.5Ghz.. New York was a nightmare on medium settings. Now with the 1090T, a solid 35FPS at maximum settings (in the Aerosoft F-16 I might add). So, If you have an AM3 socket on your mobo, and 240 USD to shell out, buy this chip.
Screenies of FSX later.
View attachment 26383
After disabling Cool-n-Quiet in my BIOS, a work around I found to fool the chip into thinking that Turbo core is disabled. I managed to bump up the frequency from 3.2Ghz up to 4.0Ghz.
I must say, this thing overclocks like a champ. I'm running it at 1.4 Volts to be on the safe side, which is still pretty low, multiplier at 18.5x, and the Bus at 217, and it is stable as can be, and at max load with a Corsair H50 cooling system, never goes beyond 56 degrees Celsius.
So, what does that mean for FSX? Alot, let's say that with my old Phenom 940 at 3.5Ghz.. New York was a nightmare on medium settings. Now with the 1090T, a solid 35FPS at maximum settings (in the Aerosoft F-16 I might add). So, If you have an AM3 socket on your mobo, and 240 USD to shell out, buy this chip.
Screenies of FSX later.
View attachment 26383
