[REQUEST] Asus/Pegatron IMISR-VM OC Unlock — BIOS Modding Guides and Problems
thatubuntuguy
#1
I posted this in Bios Mods but got no response so joined here to see what I could find.
I will repeat what I said there here.
I am doing a super low budget build and picked one of these up very cheaply. I cannot find any proper settings in the BIOS (it’s an OEM not surprised) so wondering if you could help me out by cracking the BIOS to add overclock functionality, ability to overvolt higher than 1.25V (if that’s possible) and support for PGA478 Penryn quad core microcodes (especially Q9100 as I’m planning an upgrade as even the T5800 I overclocked to 2.6Ghz using FSB increaser is not fast enough). I don’t really have experience at all of even updating my BIOS so if anyone could point me towards a guide or something that’d be brilliant.
Reading off msinfo32 my BIOS is American Megatrends Inc. 0114 06/02/2009 and SMBIOS is 2.4. I could not find my BIOS file anywhere, but the closest I got was the update file for 0117 version of my BIOS from RM’s website (company who had OEM made for them). I will attach that here.
Many thanks in advance for helpers!!
thatubuntuguy
IMISRVM_v0117.zip (955 KB)
Lost_N_BIOS
#2
Do you have DESKTOP Version, or RMONE Version? Not sure what that is, but I see in BIOS flasher batch file it has one BIOS for each in the download you provided.
Never mind, I checked both, neither have any settings hidden, so there is nothing to unlock in regards to overclocking, sorry.
Microcdes can be updated though, so at least there’s that I am not sure if your chipset supports quad core, or the updated FSB speeds, have you seen others on same chipset using quad core CPU’s or higher default FSB if it is higher?
I did not look up chipset, only asking and assuming you’ve already read some about this during your research. I know sometimes 1066 default users can’t use 1333 FSB speeds, so that is why I asked, I see this is 800 vs 1066.
If you have GM965 you may need to do this mod, not sure since microcodes for these CPU’s are already in yoru BIOS. Best to verify for sure which chipset you have, either tool mentioned below will tell you
http://forum.notebookreview.com/threads/…modders.605383/
I found this, if same as your board (Could be old spec, or different OEM etc), you will need to do the mod linked above
https://support.rm.com/_RMVirtual/Media/…al_IMISR-VM.pdf
CPU Microcode for retail Q9100 (1067A) is already there, so as long as yours is not ES/QC CPU it’s already supported.
Once you answer above about the version I can update the microcodes for you, but that’s all that can be done for this BIOS.
Here is updated BIOS, updated both versions to latest microcodes.
https://www.sendspace.com/file/dyn4hc
Please research to find which version you are suppose to use (Desktop/RMONE).
If you are unsure how to check, I’d start by looking at motherboard + BIOS info with AIDA64 or HWINfo and see what it shows for the currently flashed BIOS, if anything.
tonyspanos
#3
Thanks Lost_N_Bios for the update.
I also have an Asus IMISR-VM motherboard bought cheap from UK Ebay. As I didn’t know where it originated from, I initially flashed the desktop version which seems to have problem booting 4GB of ram where as the ONE version works flawlessly. Only other difference I could tell was the bootscreen logo if you have it enabled.
I currently have a T8300 spare on it.
Lost_N_BIOS
#4
You’re welcome, and thanks for reporting back that both BIOS boot OK! Did either of those boot screen logo’s match your original? If it did, I’d say the matching one is the one you should use.
4GB ram boot issue could have been a random glitch, did you try switching ram sticks around in same slots just switch?
Ohh! I just noticed you are not the original poster, for that you get an extra thank you for posting back report on BIOS working or not, thanks bud!
Hopefully @thatubuntuguy also had a successful flash!
thatubuntuguy
#5
Hi!
Thanks for the update Lost_N_Bios,
I can confirm I have the same motherboard as tonysparos. According to hw info it’s an OEM board from RM. I flashed the BIOS I attached with AFUDOS on freedos stick and works fine, and I will try and flash your BIOS and see if that works OK.
tonysparos did yours come with a T5800?
I have GM965 chipset with ICH-8M which apparently only supports maximum 4gb ram… Any possibility of getting more as I have some sticks lying around?
So LOST_N_BIOS will the Q9100 work out of the box with BSEL 1066>-800 FSB with your Bios?
Thanks for your help
thatubuntuguy
thatubuntuguy
#6
I am trying to flash bios but my keyboard doesn’t work!! I can’t select option…
Please advise
thatubuntuguy
Lost_N_BIOS
#7
You’re welcome @thatubuntuguy — I can look at ram possibilities, but that’s usually a chipset limitation, if there is some fake limit put there maybe I could change not sure?
I can’t say for sure about the Q9100, only know that the microcode is already there. Normally for that chipset the BSEL mod would be required, but I would try without it first and see what happens.
On your DOS keyboard issue, not sure, sounds like some file is missing for your DOS. I always use win98SE with a full copy over of the files the USB installers skip over, then go from there.
Like this I outlined and packaged up for another user — <Request> Flagship X470 Gaming 7 Wifi Motherboard BIOS Fix
thatubuntuguy
#8
Thanks for the quick reply,@Lost_N_BIOS
So to flash the BIOS I provided I used rufus to make freedos usb. I’ll try remaking the freedos stick and get back to you…
You can try, I don’t know what you would need to do but like I said I have some ddr2 sticks lying around which I can test with immediately…
thatubuntuguy
#9
It seems it is a BIOS problem actually as my keyboard does not work for selecting windows ‘start windows normally’ either like it does nothing… But it works in bios setup and for selecting boot menu…Very odd.
Please advise @Lost_N_BIOS…
tonyspanos
#10
Lost_N_BIOS:
You’re welcome, and thanks for reporting back that both BIOS boot OK! Did either of those boot screen logo’s match your original? If it did, I’d say the matching one is the one you should use.
4GB ram boot issue could have been a random glitch, did you try switching ram sticks around in same slots just switch?Ohh! I just noticed you are not the original poster, for that you get an extra thank you for posting back report on BIOS working or not, thanks bud!
Hopefully @thatubuntuguy also had a successful flash!
I always disable boot screens as I prefer checking if all my memory and devices were recognised, so I couldn’t remember the first boot.
Yes. I have 2GB Sticks one from Samsung, the other one from Hynix. Maybe it could be a SPD issue because they are 800MHz/CL6 running at 667MHz/CL5.
thatubuntuguy:
Hi!
tonyspanos did yours come with a T5800?
I have GM965 chipset with ICH-8M which apparently only supports maximum 4gb ram… Any possibility of getting more as I have some sticks lying around?
No. I opted for Celeron and 1gb of memory because I had lots of spares lying around.
As far as I have googled, there might be chance to work as HP and DELL sold back then 8GB configurations.
You could try them on and see if it boots.
I won’t spend any penny on it but for a q9100 if it works for you.
thatubuntuguy:
It seems it is a BIOS problem actually as my keyboard does not work for selecting windows ‘start windows normally’ either like it does nothing… But it works in bios setup and for selecting boot menu…Very odd.
Please advise @Lost_N_BIOS…
Enable Usb keyboard from Bios. Most of the times it is disabled by default.
thatubuntuguy
#11
@tonyspanos ,
How would I go about that? I look in usb configuration and it says nothing about enabling keyboard. You have same bios as mine apart from the microcode modification so could you give me your settings?
I put in an extra 1gb ddr2 and it posts which is great… I don’t know if it can use it so I will need to check that next… Now I have 5gb ram.
thatubuntuguy
#12
I opened 135 tabs of Firefox and mem usage went to five gb.
It can use more than 4gb
tonyspanos
#13
I think it is named Legacy USB inside the Chipset Configuration > South Bridge Configuration. I will be sure in 4 hours when I get home.
thatubuntuguy
#14
Right that’s currently on auto so should I turn it to on?
Thanks
tonyspanos
#15
It seems I also have it on auto. Try it on.
My Usb Dos Disk was made using HP USB Disk Tool
thatubuntuguy
#16
Hmm…
I put it to on but my keyboard still doesn’t work when either selecting the start windows normally thing or in FREEDOS… Weird! I’ll try tinkering with the batch file to not require keyboard input and see where that gets me — Hoping I don’t brick it
I’ll try your tool tommorow as it is late now and get back to you.
Thanks for your help
Lost_N_BIOS
#17
Did you try the USB Win98 version I posted? If not, give it a shot, should get it all sorted out for you.
If not, move your keyboard around to different ports, that may help. If it’s a USB Wireless keyboard that may not work always, you might need to dig out a wired keyboard for this, should be OK after that if it was fine before.
If worse comes to worse, we can make you a autoexec batch file. If you end up needing that route and are not sure how to do it, post for me the exact line or lines in order that you normally would enter once you hit the DOS prompt
tonyspanos
#18
Do you have the processor to try it? I’ve found one and I’m waiting for your tests to buy it!
thatubuntuguy
#19
Hi @Lost_N_BIOS
It still didn’t work… I have a wired keyboard — tried all the ports but no luck.
Here are the contents of the autoexec file: I can probably edit myself but I don’t want a brick !!
@echo off
echo Launching BIOS Flash For Asus IMISR-VM Ecoquiet 3 Mainboard
echo.
echo Type 1 to flash an Asus IMISR-VM Mainboard DESKTOP Version.
echo Type 2 to flash an Asus IMISR-VM Mainboard RMONE Version.
choice /C:123 /N Please choose an option or type 3 to Quit [1=DESKTOP,2=RMONE,3=QUIT] ?
IF ERRORLEVEL == 3 GOTO END
IF ERRORLEVEL == 2 GOTO RMONE
IF ERRORLEVEL == 1 GOTO DESKTOP
:DESKTOP
AFUDOS ECO0117.ROM /R /L2 /B /P /C /CLNEVNLOG /Q /ECUF /N /K
echo Now setting default CMOS Settings
BLAT72FF p6base.cfg
echo Setting RM String
setdmi /SM «RM plc»
echo Please reset the system and check CMOS settings
goto END
:RMONE
AFUDOS ONE0117.ROM /R /L2 /B /P /C /CLNEVNLOG /Q /ECUF /N /K
echo Now setting default CMOS Settings
BLAT72FF P6base.cfg
echo Updating Settings
settings /SM «RM plc»
echo Please reset the system and check CMOS settings
goto END
:END
@tonyspanos I have to convince my dad to buy the CPU and he wants me to get rid of my T5800 first before purchasing the Q9100. As there is no guarantee it will work is it possible for you to test it? It would be a big help in convincing my dad if you can get it working!
Anyway there may be some complications as I stumbled across this when seeing if anyone else had managed it…
https://forum.thinkpads.com/viewtopic.ph…tart=30#p728624
It shows some thinkpad modders shoehorning Core 2 Quads in their GM965 T61 laptops — maybe we will need to mod our motherboards too. Obviously we need to try without cutting pins first or any BSEL thing and see if it POSTS.
Sorry about that!!
Lost_N_BIOS
#20
Well, you should not end up with a brick at all, since tonyspanos already confirmed both BIOS are OK and booting.
All you have to do is figure out which BIOS you need, then edit the autoexec, removing all reference to the other BIOS you don’t use.
Which one of the following logos do you see during boot, whichever, that’s the one you want to leave in the autoexec
eco0117.rom
one0117.rom
next page →
Intel Core 2 Duo T5800 processor review: CPU specs, performance benchmarks
Buy on Amazon
Core 2 Duo T5800 processor released by Intel; release date: 1 October 2008. The processor is designed for mobile-computers and based on Merom microarchitecture.
CPU is locked to prevent overclocking. Total number of cores — 2, threads — 2. Maximum CPU clock speed — 2 GHz. Maximum operating temperature — 85°C. Manufacturing process technology — 65 nm. Cache size: L2 — 2048 KB.
Supported socket types: PPGA478. Power consumption (TDP): 35 Watt.
Benchmarks
PassMark Single thread mark |
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PassMark CPU mark |
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Geekbench 4 Single Core |
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Geekbench 4 Multi-Core |
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Name | Value |
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PassMark — Single thread mark | 727 |
PassMark — CPU mark | 628 |
Geekbench 4 — Single Core | 238 |
Geekbench 4 — Multi-Core | 410 |
Specifications (specs)
Architecture codename | Merom |
Launch date | 1 October 2008 |
Place in performance rating | 2423 |
Processor Number | T5800 |
Series | Legacy Intel® Core™ Processors |
Status | Discontinued |
Vertical segment | Mobile |
64 bit support | |
Base frequency | 2. 00 GHz |
Bus Speed | 800 MHz FSB |
Die size | 143 mm2 |
Front-side bus (FSB) | 800 MHz |
L2 cache | 2048 KB |
Manufacturing process technology | 65 nm |
Maximum core temperature | 85°C |
Maximum frequency | 2 GHz |
Number of cores | 2 |
Number of threads | 2 |
Transistor count | 291 million |
VID voltage range | 1. 075V-1.175V |
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Low Halogen Options Available | |
Package Size | 35mm x 35mm |
Sockets supported | PPGA478 |
Thermal Design Power (TDP) | 35 Watt |
Execute Disable Bit (EDB) | |
Intel® Trusted Execution technology (TXT) | |
Enhanced Intel SpeedStep® technology | |
FSB parity | |
Intel 64 | |
Intel® Active Management technology (AMT) | |
Intel® Demand Based Switching | |
Intel® Hyper-Threading technology | |
Intel® Turbo Boost technology | |
Intel® Virtualization Technology (VT-x) |
Navigation
Choose a CPU
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Compare Intel Core 2 Duo T5800 with others
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Core 2 Duo T5800
vs
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Pentium 4-M 2. 40
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Core 2 Duo T5800
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Core 2 Duo T5750
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GX-217GA
Processor Intel Core2 Duo T5800
Home / Processors / Intel Core2 Duo T5800
- Edelmark rating — 0 out of 10;
- Release date: October, 2008;
- Number of cores: 2;
- Frequency: 2 GHz;
- Power consumption (TDP): 35W;
Characteristics Intel Core2 Duo T5800
General parameters
Clock frequency | 2 GHz |
---|---|
Cores | |
Socket | 478 |
Functions
NX-bit (XD-bit) present | Yes |
---|---|
Trusted computing support | No |
Virtualization support | No |
Instructions supported | Supplemental SSE3 SSE2 SSE MMX SSE3 |
Support for dynamic frequency scaling (CPU Throttling) | Yes |
Power consumption
Power consumption | 35W |
---|---|
Annual cost of electricity (NON-commercial use) | 8. 43 $/year |
Capacity per W | 2.25pt/W |
Average energy consumption | 28.44W |
Bus
Architecture | |
---|---|
Clock frequency | 800MHz |
Parts and features
Architecture | x86-64 |
---|---|
Threads | 2 |
Second level cache (L2) | 2MB |
Second level cache per core (L2) | 1 MB/core |
Process | 65 nm |
Number of transistors | 291,000,000 |
Maximum processors | 1 |
Processor multiplier | 10 |
Voltage range | 1.07 — 1.18V |
Overclocking Core2 Duo T5800
Overclocking Clock | 2. 16 GHz |
---|---|
Water-cooled boost clock | 2 GHz |
PassMark (Overclocked) | 711.5 |
Air cooled boost clock | 2.16 GHz |
Integrated graphics
Graphics core | No |
---|---|
Brand | No |
Latest DirectX | No |
Number of displays supported | No |
Graphics core clock speed | No |
Maximum clock frequency | No |
3DMark06 | No |
Comparison of Core2 Duo T5800 with similar processors
Performance
Performance using all cores.
Core2 Duo T5800 | 4.9 out of 10 |
---|---|
Core2 Duo T9900 | 5. 4 out of 10 |
Core2 Duo T9300 | 5.2 out of 10 |
Performance per core
Base performance per processor core.
Core2 Duo T5800 | 4.7 out of 10 |
---|---|
Core2 Duo T9900 | 5.8 out of 10 |
Core2 Duo T9300 | 5.3 out of 10 |
Integrated Graphics
Integrated GPU performance for graphics tasks.
Core2 Duo T5800 | 0.0 out of 10 |
---|---|
Core2 Duo T9900 | 0.0 out of 10 |
Core2 Duo T9300 | 0.0 out of 10 |
Integrated graphics (OpenCL)
Integrated GPU performance for parallel computing.
Core2 Duo T5800 | 0.0 out of 10 |
---|---|
Core2 Duo T9900 | 0.0 out of 10 |
Core2 Duo T9300 | 0.0 out of 10 |
Performance per W
How efficiently the processor uses electricity.
Core2 Duo T5800 | 2.8 out of 10 |
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Core2 Duo T9900 | 2.9 out of 10 |
Core2 Duo T9300 | 2.9 out of 10 |
Price-performance ratio
How much you overpay for performance.
Core2 Duo T5800 | 4.8 out of 10 |
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Core2 Duo T9900 | no data |
Core2 Duo T9300 | no data |
Total Edelmark rating
Total processor rating.
Core2 Duo T5800 | 0.0 out of 10 |
---|---|
Core2 Duo T9900 | 0.0 out of 10 |
Core2 Duo T9300 | 0.0 out of 10 |
Benchmarks Core2 Duo T5800
GeekBench 3 (Multi-core)
Core2 Duo T5800 | 1.869 |
---|---|
Core2 Duo T9900 | 2.984 |
Core2 Duo T9300 | 2. 459 |
GeekBench 3 (Single Core)
Core2 Duo T5800 | 1.037 |
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Core2 Duo T9900 | 1.657 |
Core2 Duo T9300 | 1.376 |
GeekBench 3 (AES single core)
Core2 Duo T5800 | 84,400 MB/s |
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Core2 Duo T9900 | 125,000 MB/s |
Core2 Duo T9300 | 102,200 MB/s |
GeekBench (32-bit)
Core2 Duo T5800 | 1.685 |
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Core2 Duo T9900 | 2.787 |
Core2 Duo T9300 | 2.294 |
GeekBench (64-bit)
Core2 Duo T5800 | 3.038 |
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Core2 Duo T9300 | 2.640 |
Core2 Duo T9900 | 3.154 |
GeekBench
Core2 Duo T5800 | 3. 038 |
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Core2 Duo T9900 | 4.139 |
Core2 Duo T9300 | 3.744 |
PassMark
Core2 Duo T5800 | 1.112 |
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Core2 Duo T9900 | 2.149 |
Core2 Duo T9300 | 1.667 |
PassMark (Single Core)
Core2 Duo T5800 | 677 |
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Core2 Duo T9900 | 1.186 |
Core2 Duo T9300 | 974 |
Video Reviews of
[Natalex] CPU replacement in amilo pi 2540 T5800 laptop to T
Um, a week ago I changed p8400 to p9700 on my laptop, and on p8400 everything flew and 1080 60fps with goPro3 went without brakes, and on p9700 the work became even more stable and without thoughtfulness. And the fact that you have such brakes is not surprising, the OS is all fucked up, that your disk shows that it is full, that the desktop. With this approach, you can achieve brakes from the i7 7700k as well. Initially, I chose between t9800 and t9900, but between t9800 and p9700 there is no difference at all in performance and the price is + -100 rubles, and tpd 35w and 28w. A t9900 is a drop more powerful, which will not be noticeable, and the price is 1000 rubles more than the other two.
There are a couple of nuances. The blue screen popped up intermittently. As it turned out, my son had 5 gigs of RAM 2+2+1. One bar of 2 gigabytes worked at a frequency of less than 800 MHz, and at this frequency the maximum frequency of the processor could be 2.4 GHz (which was written in the BIOS), after I took out the problem bar, the blue screens disappeared. Another nuance concerns the temperature of the processor. It was more than 100 degrees, this is a glitch. I think with the firmware modified BIOS, the problem will disappear. The rest of the processor works great. nine0004
Tags:2 GHz, 35W, Core2 Duo T5800, CPU, Intel
90,000 characteristics of Intel Core2 Duo T5800 Merom: Tests, competitors, price
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CORETU CORETU CREL 2, manufactured in 65 nm process technology, Merom architecture.
Core2 Duo T5800 base frequency — 2 GHz. Please note that the Intel Core2 Duo T5800 cooler must cool processors with a TDP of at least 35W at stock frequencies. When overclocked, the requirements increase. nine0004
Price in Russia
Do you want to buy Core2 Duo T5800 cheaply? Look at the list of stores that already sell the processor in your city.
Family
- Core2 Duo T5900
- Core2 Duo T5850
- Core2 Duo T5870
Tests Intel Core2 Duo T5800
Games
Productivity in games and similar appendices, in accordance with the tests.
The performance of 4 cores, if any, and performance per core has the greatest impact on the result, since most games do not fully use more than 4 cores. nine0004
The speed of caches and working with RAM is also important.
Speed in office use
Performance in everyday work such as browsers and office applications.
The performance of 1 core has the greatest impact on the result, since most of these applications use only one, ignoring the rest.
Similarly, many professional applications such as various CADs ignore multi-threaded performance. nine0004
Speed in heavy applications
Performance in resource-intensive tasks loading a maximum of 8 cores.
The performance of all cores and their number have the greatest impact on the result, since most of these applications willingly use all the cores and increase the speed accordingly.
At the same time, certain periods of work can be demanding on the performance of one or two cores, for example, applying filters in the editor.
Data obtained from tests by users who tested their systems with and without overclocking. Thus, you see the average values corresponding to the processor.
Speed of numerical operations
Simple household tasks |
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Minimum | Average | Maximum |
37 | Memory: 61 | 72 |
Memory 63.2 |
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10 | 1 core: 21 | 26 |
1 core 9 |
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15 | 2 cores: 39 | 51 |
2 cores 8. 5 |
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Demanding games and tasks |
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Minimum | Average | Maximum |
18 | 4 cores: 39 | 50 |
4 cores 4.3 |
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18 | 8 cores: 40 | 50 |
8 cores 2.3 |
Extreme |
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Minimum | Average | Maximum |
18 | All cores: 40 | 51 9002 |
nine0002 All cores
0. 7 |
Different tasks require different CPU strengths. A system with few fast cores and low memory latency will be fine for the vast majority of games, but will be inferior to a system with a lot of slow cores in a rendering scenario.
We believe that a minimum 4/4 (4 physical cores and 4 threads) processor is suitable for a budget gaming PC. At the same time, some games can load it at 100%, slow down and freeze, and performing any tasks in the background will lead to a drop in FPS. nine0004
Ideally, the budget shopper should aim for a minimum of 4/8 and 6/6. A gamer with a big budget can choose between 6/12, 8/8 and 8/16. Processors with 10 and 12 cores can perform well in games with high frequency and fast memory, but are overkill for such tasks. Also, buying for the future is a dubious undertaking, since in a few years many slow cores may not provide sufficient gaming performance.
When choosing a processor for your work, consider how many cores your programs use. For example, photo and video editors can use 1-2 cores when working with filtering, and rendering or converting in the same editors already uses all threads. nine0004
Data obtained from tests by users who tested their systems both with overclocking (maximum value in the table) and without (minimum). A typical result is shown in the middle, the more filled in the color bar, the better the average result among all tested systems.
Compare
Benchmarks
Benchmarks were run on stock hardware, that is, without overclocking and with factory settings. Therefore, on overclocked systems, the points can noticeably differ upwards. Also, small performance changes may be due to the BIOS version. nine0004
Passmark
AMD Athlon 64 X2 Dual Core 4800+
652
Intel Core2 Duo T5900
652
AMD Athlon 64 X2 Dual Core 4200+
651
Intel Core2 Duo E4400
650
Intel ATOM Z3740
642
Intel Core2 Duo T5800
640
Intel Core2 Duo T7100
634
Intel Pentium 987 9000 9000 634
9000 9000 9000 9000 9000 9000 9000 9000 9000 9000 INTEL INTEL0678 Intel Pentium 967
626
Intel Celeron E1500
626
Tests in games
FPS measured by us in popular games on Intel Core2 Duo T5800 and meets system requirements. Please note that the official requirements of developers in games do not always match the data of real tests. Also, the result is strongly influenced by the overclocking of the system and the graphic settings in the game. We test at high settings in FullHD resolution to get numbers close to real gameplay. nine0019 RAM
- N/A
SSD
- A400 240GB
- A400 120GB
Also with these components, the best results in tests and stable operation are achieved.
Most popular config: motherboard for Intel Core2 Duo T5800 — HP Pavilion dv4 Notebook PC, video card — HD 3000 (Mobile V1 1.1/1.2 GHz), SSD — A400 240GB. nine0004
Features
Basic
Socket Installed in motherboards with a suitable socket. Note that a socket is not guaranteed to be compatible. The manufacturer may not add support to the BIOS. | |
Manufacturer Firm | Intel |
Code name of the Microarchitecture family. | Merom |
Performance
Cores The total number of physical cores. | 2 |
ThreadsNumber of threads. The number of logical processor cores that the operating system sees. | 2 |
Multi-Threading Technology With Intel’s Hyper-threading and AMD’s SMT technology, one physical core is recognized as two logical cores by the operating system, thereby increasing processor performance in multi-threaded applications. nine0027 | Missing |
Base frequencyThe guaranteed frequency of all cores (P-cores in the case of the corresponding architecture) of the processor at maximum load. It is important to remember that speed and frequency are not directly related. For example, a new processor at a lower frequency may be faster than an old one at a higher one. | 2 GHz |
TDPThermal Design Power is an indicator that determines the heat dissipation in standard operation. The cooler or water cooling system must be rated for a larger value. Remember that with a factory bus or manual overclocking, TDP increases significantly. nine0027 | 35 W |
Cache and RAM
Video core
PCI
Details
Model Official name. | T5800 |
ArchitectureCode name for the microarchitecture generation. | Merom |
Process The manufacturing process, measured in nanometers. The smaller the technical process, the more perfect the technology, the lower the heat dissipation and power consumption. For Ryzen with a chiplet layout, the CCD process is implied. nine0027 | 65 nm |
DescriptionInformation about the processor, taken from the official website of the manufacturer. | Intel® Core™2 Duo Processor T5800 (2M Cache, 2.00 GHz, 800 MHz FSB) |
Instructions | 64-bit |
Bus frequency The speed of communication with the system. | 800 MHz FSB |
Competitors
Games | Office | Heavy duty | |
---|---|---|---|
Better than | AMD A6-4455M APU | AMD A6-9200 APU (2016 M.SR) | AMD Athlon II M300 |
Worse than | AMD Turion X2 Dual-Core Mobile RM-70 | AMD A6-9210 APU (2016 M.SR) |
Please note that competitors are selected automatically based on performance in a particular task.