CRGreathouse said:
... This is why I wanted to know about motherboards. Right now I have a spreadsheet comparing MHz per dollar and the cheap chips are given an unfair advantage because I'm not considering motherboard cost ... So you'd recommend getting the cheapest motherboard that can support the chip, yes?...
It really depends on your budget, experience, and what you are trying to actually accomplish. Let's assume you've got the pc experience to put this all together {hardware & software}, and your trying to calculate data sets that require at least 2 gb ram.
Option 1: {the low budget build}
- you go bottom dollar on your equipment, meaning lowest priced board, cpu, and ram. With some research, it could be done for $1,000. You would probably get by just fine, but things might seem to take a little longer than you want.
Option 2: {mid level built}
- something along the lines that has been discussed. Intel Core Dou cpu's, decent gigabyte {my personal favorite} boards, fast ram... this would be in the $1,100 - $1,300 range. This is probably where your best bang for the buck is at. You would be able to notice a difference between this type of system and your budget build.
Option 3: {the beast}
- you wait about 3-4 months and Intel releases their new Q9xxx cpu's. You could easily spend $1,500 - $2,000. Higher end boards, 4 Gb ram each. Something in this area could easily double option 1's output. This would be a huge number crunching beast.
.. and about Overclocking..
I've been overclocking for +5 years.. it's a fun hobby. It can be done safely without compromising your equipment or the validity of your results. You just have to be careful with what you do. Here is the link to my work machine. I built it about a yr ago and its been running 24/7 at my office as my primary pc. { I'm a system analyst for a local university} http://valid.x86-secret.com/show_oc?id=213938 . If you really want to know how to safely overclock, we can open another thread.