Pentium III Tualatin vs Pentium 4 Willamette 1.4 GHz Battle

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  • čas přidán 10. 07. 2024
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  • Věda a technologie

Komentáře • 489

  • @stale2665
    @stale2665 Před 5 lety +45

    I remember buying a Pentium M based laptop on 2005 and being completely blown away by how much it could do at such a low frequency (1,6 Ghz). Compared to my old desktop, it would encode MP3 so fast that I thought the program had bugged out and just written blank files instead.

    • @MOS6582
      @MOS6582 Před 2 lety +9

      Yeah Pentium M laptops were awesome👍 Still got a P-M Thinkpad and it just feels so quick doing any XP task I throw at it.

    • @qwertykeyboard5901
      @qwertykeyboard5901 Před rokem +4

      @@MOS6582 I have an inspiron 700m with a 1.7ghz pentium M. Nice laptop! Even with modern debian!

    • @Pidalin
      @Pidalin Před rokem

      Yes, but that was 2005, one or 2 years was really a difference back in the day. People know judge Pentium 4 not fairly, because they don't see whole story and what was actually available in that time.

    • @gentuxable
      @gentuxable Před 10 měsíci +2

      @@PidalinThe problem was that the Pentium 4 was as fast as if the branch prediction worked but (as the benchmark showed) even significantly slower than the Pentium 3 if the branch prediction did not work for the task and the whole pipeline had to be rebuilt wasting cycles. And to get this you were asked to invest in not only a new board and CPU but also new RAM and PSU so almost a whole new PC that is sometimes slower than the CPU that it replaces.
      The first P4 laptops had battery run times of about 2 hours which was good ironically because you'd have gone crazy if the fan ran any longer. That was why people judged it poorly.

    • @randomguydoes2901
      @randomguydoes2901 Před 7 měsíci +2

      ​@@Pidalin Williamette with SD RAM or RD RAM was a disaster. At the time, Athlon had been available for a while already and those were faster than that. The reason intel didn't have anything better at the time is.. well because they were busy with this piece of crap.
      The reason they eventually ditched netburst completely was because netburst was crap.

  • @secularargument
    @secularargument Před 3 lety +9

    I hear Austrian, German, Australian and British in that accent. Amazing. Good videos!

    • @philscomputerlab
      @philscomputerlab  Před 3 lety +5

      Well I lived in all those countries :D But I'm Austrian and now living in Australia :D

    • @secularargument
      @secularargument Před 3 lety

      @@philscomputerlab awesome!

  • @magottyk
    @magottyk Před 6 lety +47

    The thing that I find most interesting about the P4 was that AMD showed that frequency wasn't the be all and end all in CPU performance. While the P4 eventually outpaced the Athlon XP, the Athlon 64 came along and beat the P4 soundly in most things with only 2/3rds of the actual frequency.
    Then in a fit of insanity AMD somehow thought that emulating the P4 thinking was a good idea and we got the unmitigated failure of FX, which when first introduced had the very same comparison to phenom 2 as we see here with this P4vP3 comparison.
    While FX pulled ahead of phenom2 it did so only because of the higher clock speeds at introduction, but because people were overclocking phenom 2's up to 4GHz (because they could), the initial FX bulldozers couldn't really compete well against the processors they were replacing (one can only wonder what a phenom 3 might have been like, especially an 8 core).

    • @Knaeckebrotsaege
      @Knaeckebrotsaege Před 6 lety +7

      I was actually shocked and very disappointed when those Faildozers came out... the FX-4100 at 3.6GHz performed just about the same as a (very mildly by core2 standards) overclocked Core 2 Quad Q6600 at 3GHz... an almost 5 year old CPU at the time of the FX release. Not to mention any Sandy Bridge CPU from the same year beat the sh*t out of the so called equivalent FX CPU. WTF were they thinking with that whole FX lineup?!
      It's no wonder why you still occasionally see people with heavily overclocked Sandy Bridge setups from back in 2011 (same year as the FX), but all the FXes (along with all the underperforming-when-new FM1 and FM2 trash) have long since moved to the scrap pile

    • @Trick-Framed
      @Trick-Framed Před 4 lety +3

      @@Knaeckebrotsaege AMD was hoping the software would catch up to the hardware. Finewine and all. If you think about it, it did. The extra cores make the FX 8 cores relevant for 1080p 60Hz gaming even today.

    • @pauls4522
      @pauls4522 Před 3 lety +2

      I was still young enough in 2011 when bulldozer came out where I could see myself leaning into fanboyism toward AMD. It was the absolute failure of those benchmarks that fated day day in fall 2011 that my bastions of fanboyism finally disappeared (dramatic wording is intentional :) ). I knew I couldn't be stupid enough to try to support a bulldozer chip. Then a year later when pile driver came out and it was actually respectable in use cases I needed it for at the price point I went with the fx8350. I still have that fx8350 to this very day. Funny joke is that its been so long since 2012 that AMD has become relevant again and if I did build a new pc it would because AMD is legitimately the best all round chip and it would not be any fanboyism.

    • @pauls4522
      @pauls4522 Před 3 lety +6

      @@Trick-Framed Just recently a GPU scaling benchmark was released by hardware unboxed that shows the fx8370 cpu still failing miserably. Although I think I want to walk through that video again and see where the bias in game selection sit in the video. Oh yeah I think the vulkan/dx12 titles the fx system was actually competent. Its just even to this day the adoption of dx12/vulkan is not good enough.

    • @Trick-Framed
      @Trick-Framed Před 3 lety +2

      @@pauls4522 Gamer's Nexus did one too. Except Steve Burke admitted his home PC had an 8370 and he kept his beast machines at work. It did well with a 2080ti....which I think most processors would...lol.

  • @amnottabs
    @amnottabs Před 6 lety +44

    can't wait for those P4 Prescotts wiping the floor with previous P4s in the room heating benchmarks!

    • @FerrariKangaroo
      @FerrariKangaroo Před 6 lety +2

      For sure, the Prescotts were terrible. I own a couple of Northwoods though and they run frosty by comparison.

    • @RodBeauvex
      @RodBeauvex Před 6 lety +7

      Amazing how history repeats itself. When the first Pentiums came out, there was much discussion about the massive 16 watt monsters needed a heatsink AND a fan. :D

    • @SteelRhinoXpress
      @SteelRhinoXpress Před 4 lety

      Prescotts were soo hot intel came out with the btx form factor to try to get them cooler.

    • @HappyBeezerStudios
      @HappyBeezerStudios Před 3 lety

      Later with the Cedar Mill shrink they got thermals and power draw under control. They aren't bad, just came too late. That is probably what Prescott should've been. Released in early 2006 they were succeeded mid 2006 by the first Core 2.

  • @LS3ftw15
    @LS3ftw15 Před 6 lety +13

    Yes!!! Several commenters requested this on a previous video and here it is! Phil delivers once again. Love this channel.

  • @Lolimaster
    @Lolimaster Před 6 lety +73

    You should do a PIII 1.4Ghz vs Core2Duo 1.4Ghz (disable 1 core), Core2 is basically an updated PIII. Would be interesting.

    • @niewazneniewazne1890
      @niewazneniewazne1890 Před 4 lety +19

      Core 1 series in laptops is more of a updated PIII, as it still uses P6 microarchitecture with some changes. Core 2 series was a very heavy modification.

    • @dabombinablemi6188
      @dabombinablemi6188 Před 4 lety +14

      @@niewazneniewazne1890 Technically a comparison to the Pentium M/Celeron M (though those are noticeably worse) would be even more accurate. Even visually they look similar to socket 370 Pentiums/Celerons.

    • @Romerco77
      @Romerco77 Před 4 lety +10

      The Core 2 Duo would obliterate the PIII without any doubt. A C2D destroys even the newest socket 775 P4

    • @FinnLovesFP
      @FinnLovesFP Před 4 lety +9

      @@Romerco77 the slowest Core 2 Duo matched or beat out the fastest Pentium 4. so theres no comparison there.

    • @JohnSmith-iu8cj
      @JohnSmith-iu8cj Před 3 lety +1

      I would like to see such a video no matter what how big the difference is!

  • @kami4542
    @kami4542 Před 6 lety +4

    Great video dude, happy to see that you took in count those who wanted this comparison :) kind regards

  • @lordmithras47
    @lordmithras47 Před 6 lety +12

    That thumbnail made me chuckle. Thanks for that.

  • @dtemple87
    @dtemple87 Před 6 lety +1

    I love how in depth you went with this video!! Nice job keep it up

  • @alpharisc
    @alpharisc Před 4 lety +7

    I had a p3 1000 and "upgraded" to a 1.4ghz p4, it was slightly slower in my benchmarks (use to load music projects up and see how many plugins I could run). I was very lucky the shop I went to let me return it and buy a 1.4ghz p3, kept that as my main machine until I got a Northwood 2.8ghz p4. Cool video

  • @Ace12GA
    @Ace12GA Před 6 lety +22

    I had a P4 1.4, used it for a file server. It was a total lemon for a desktop. I remember even the newer 1.8 P4 chips being terrible. At the time the hot setup was a Duron 1.3, which would destroy a P4 1.8, on average. You could buy a new Duron 1.3 for under a $100 Canadian peso's too. That was a really fun time in computers back then. 1GB of ram was over the top. Really great time.

    • @net_news
      @net_news Před 6 lety +8

      canadian peso's haha

    • @user-vz4bo1en8x
      @user-vz4bo1en8x Před 5 lety +4

      What I remember from those early P4's was that almost all boards that come into the shop were dead, while P3 continue to last longer and longer. Athlon/Duron were a good option, but they were so fragile that any error would destroy the cpu die. Besides that? I miss so much the times that I had my 550MHz Athlon with 768MB RAM and a FX5200 128MB. XP running fast and I could even enable HQ in youtube (who remembers that from early days of YT?) with 30fps hahahahahh

  • @rcarkk
    @rcarkk Před 6 lety +2

    Love this channel. Great content with very good technical knowledge.

  • @_LM_
    @_LM_ Před 6 lety +8

    It's worth mentioning that Intel's next overclocking gem around that time would be the 1.6 GHz P4 Northwood, which could easily reach 2.4 GHz (with FSB and SDRAM running at 150 MHz). As inefficient as the P4 architecture was, it still managed to outdo what any P3 could ever reach.
    I guess that would be a nice subject for another video.

  • @mighoet
    @mighoet Před 6 lety +13

    One of my first computers was an old Compaq Evo D310 with a Intel Pentium 4 "Northwood" 478mPGA CPU with a 2.66 GHz speed and included a Nvidia Geforce 6200 GPU

  • @mattafaak
    @mattafaak Před 6 lety +1

    Once again, giving the people what they need! Thanks Phil!

  • @AnonyDave
    @AnonyDave Před 6 lety +8

    Heads up, CL is CAS Latency rather than Cache Latency. It's based on one of the signals involved in DRAM, the CAS (Column Access Strobe) and how many clock ticks you have to wait between strobing it and some of the other signals.

  • @iLife64
    @iLife64 Před 3 lety +18

    I love my socket 478 computers, might not hit as hard a P3 in raw performance but I really appreciate SSE2 support as I use them for 1996-2009 gaming

    • @Pidalin
      @Pidalin Před rokem +2

      People speak about Tualatin now like about some god like CPU, but after Northwood core and frequencies like 2.4 GHz were released, Tualatin was totaly obsolete, P4 northwood was just much faster and ofcourse even more fast thank to DDR memory. I have Tualatin 1.4 GHz, so I can test it, I am not just using some old memories, so I can see all those myths. It was great architecture in case of energy efficiency, but RAW performance was already really low in 2002, especially because of SDRAM hellmory which were always problematical, problems with compatibility etc...switch to DDR was really a massive jump in term of compatibility. Jump to DDR3 later was pretty much like return of SDRAM, I hated DDR3, so many problems with them, unstability, blue screens. I mean mainly on socket 775 boards. 😀

    • @Protoking
      @Protoking Před rokem +1

      @@Pidalin I recall quite clearly people have always been worshipping the tualatin even back in 2006 when I was using a Duron 850MHz there was many people in computer forums either drooling at the thought of owning one (Tualatin, not my Duron lol) or people who did have one and bragged it was magically smoother than the P4s even when the frame rates were lower. Of course everybody seemed to have the 1.4GHz PIII-S with 512kb L2. That said I do want one to complete my PIII collection. I have a 600MHz Slot 1 Katmai on a 440BX, a 1GHz Coppermine S370 133MHz FSB model and if I had a Tualatin 1.4 S model I’d have all 3 of the fastest model Pentium III’s on their respective process design 250nm Katmai 180nm coppermine and 130nm Tualatin.

    • @Pidalin
      @Pidalin Před rokem +2

      @@Protoking I recently sold my Tualatin 1.4 GHz, it's really interesting piece of history, but I need to lower that number of computer hardware I have at home and I want to keep only practical things, which Tualatin is not, for some late Win 9x retro PC, it's better to find some decent Athlon XP with DDR RAM, Tualatin is weak. But frequency/performance ratio is ofcourse very good compared to some P4, problem is that after 2001, clock speeds jumped up pretty fast, to tualatin became obsolete pretty fast.
      Using some 850 MHz Duron in 2006 had to be really pain, I had still PII 400 MHz in 2004, but then it went pretty fast, I had a new computer (I mean not new, but new for me) pretty much every half year. 🙂
      I had some Celeron D 2.8 GHz and GF 6800LE
      later 7600GT) in 2006 and that was already weak for new games because these celerons and Pentium 4s were bottlenecking these late AGP GPUs, you already needed core 2 duo in 2006 or 2007 to play in better quality. I have a lot of retro HW and I do many tests, I am shocked how poorly games ran back in the day on HW from that period of time, we are complaining now, but it was even worse 20 years ago, you had to play in 800x600/low to stable 40 FPS. 😀

    • @user-ir2sy9ut1e
      @user-ir2sy9ut1e Před 11 měsíci

      @@Pidalin thank you for share

    • @jeanpaultongeren125
      @jeanpaultongeren125 Před 9 měsíci

      @@Protoking Cool!

  • @brentboswell1294
    @brentboswell1294 Před 3 lety +19

    If you're wondering what the tiny brown slot is on the left side of the Pentium IV motherboard, it's a riser for the Kennereth Fast Ethernet adapter that interfaces with the ICH2 chipset.

    • @gentuxable
      @gentuxable Před 10 měsíci

      That is surely AMR slot that allowed for some softmodem/audio cards. Never seen a card myself though.

    • @brentboswell1294
      @brentboswell1294 Před 10 měsíci

      @@gentuxable I tested the network risers that went in that slot at Intel. It was a network interface slot. There was also a digital subscriber line (DSL) interface available for it. Intel only provided the risers to OEMs for some reason (which is why you hardly see the riser cards)...ICH2 had a MAC (Media Access Controller) built into the chipset that interfaced directly with the "north bridge", bypassing the I/O busses (you could send and receive100 MB Ethernet at wire speed on these boards, a feat previously reserved for servers!). It lacked a PHY, or physical interface, which was provided by the riser card. Some motherboards used the ICH2 MAC and actually provided a PHY as well, so you got a LOM (Lan on Motherboard) on those systems. Intel created many more ICHx interfaces after this, but they discarded the clunky risers. Lots of laptop chipsets had an ICH-based LOM in them.

  • @2dfx
    @2dfx Před 6 lety +4

    Phil, thanks for giving Willamette a go! Really cool to see. Although I would have loved to see the Socket-423 variant.

  • @ND22M
    @ND22M Před 6 lety +15

    Phil, I f*ing love your videos!

    • @AtariBorn
      @AtariBorn Před 6 lety +2

      F*ck, I Philling love your videos!

  • @stutz1847
    @stutz1847 Před 6 lety

    very good video phil, thanks a lot!

  • @2007tantrum
    @2007tantrum Před 6 lety +7

    Thank you Phill for that video, I always wanted to see such competition. When i was kid, I’ve heard a lot of negative things about Willamette against Tualatin

  • @hindel6141
    @hindel6141 Před 6 lety

    Awesome video as always! Just makes me a bit sad I never had those things in the past.. Keep up the good work!

    • @philscomputerlab
      @philscomputerlab  Před 6 lety +1

      One of the biggest joys I get out of doing this, is playing with hardware, that was totally out of reach back in the day, but can be had for little money now :)

  • @Maisonier
    @Maisonier Před rokem

    Amazing video, as usual.

  • @martijn208
    @martijn208 Před 6 lety +4

    i recently rebuild my first pc with a Tualatin 1Ghz celeron, and a AOpen MX3S-T mainboard. oh and thanks Phil for hosting the firmware for that board.

  • @awhooley
    @awhooley Před 4 lety +4

    Great video Phil! Today, I Found a Dell Inspiron 8100 today in a thrift store. Has a tualitin 1ghz in it along with a Geforce 2!
    Runs retro games on Win98 smooth as silk

  • @PaulTheFox1988
    @PaulTheFox1988 Před 6 lety +9

    Just a slight correction Phil, CL on RAM stands for CAS Latency, CAS stands for Column Address Strobe, not cache :)
    Great video as always though, you're definitely one of my favourite CZcamsrs and as much as I know, I still find myself learning loads from your videos :)

    • @philscomputerlab
      @philscomputerlab  Před 6 lety +5

      Ah, thanks for the correction :D Nothing gets past you guys :P

    • @PaulTheFox1988
      @PaulTheFox1988 Před 6 lety +4

      No worries. It's one of the things I love about this community, no matter how much we know, we can always learn more from others. :)

    • @gex581990
      @gex581990 Před 6 měsíci

      I thought he was saying Cas but his accent made it seem like cache, guess I was wrong haha.

  • @mtunayucer
    @mtunayucer Před 6 lety +5

    Yay first was waiting this kinda video for a long time

  • @stamasd8500
    @stamasd8500 Před 6 lety +3

    One small correction, CL as in CL-2 is not "cache" latency, but CAS latency. CAS or Column Access Strobe is one of the signals used for DRAM control. The other is RAS or Row Access Strobe.
    (edit) en.wikipedia.org/wiki/CAS_latency

  • @evergreengamer5767
    @evergreengamer5767 Před 3 lety +1

    as somebody who grew up in oregon it pleased me to hear willamette pronunciation not get butchered

  • @3DfxAslinger
    @3DfxAslinger Před 6 lety +36

    High Clock frequencies are very important for the netburst architecture. I think a overclocked Tualatin to 1,6Ghz comes very close to the 2,2 GHz Northwood.

    • @HappyBeezerStudios
      @HappyBeezerStudios Před 6 lety +7

      It does. Depending on the applications even on 1400 Tualatin scales between 1.8-2.0 on the Netburst scale. or as fast as a 2.66 GHz Northwood Celeron :D

    • @GraveUypo
      @GraveUypo Před 6 lety +3

      you see you much the increase from 100 fsb to 133 helps the system? if you increase it further to 166 AND increase the clock speed the system gets a lot faster. not sure if tualatin can handle that though

    • @3DfxAslinger
      @3DfxAslinger Před 6 lety +5

      GraveUypo
      I have max. tested 150 Mhz FSB with my 1,4 ghz Tualatin (1575 MHz). This frequency is still save for AGP/PCI cards. (75/37.5). I dont want go higher. Also positive is, that the last SL6BY stepping can handle this frequency with the standard vcore of 1,45V.
      In 3DMark 2000 (standard settings) and a GeForce 4 Ti 4600 (320/700), I get 12700 points.

    • @Lady_Zenith
      @Lady_Zenith Před 6 lety +11

      My Tualatin did hit 1,7Ghz hehe, and I did it on purpose to overclock the PCI as highest as possible cause it increases the bandwidth to the Voodoo5 PCI Iv used. But back to the netbursts, there has been huge IPC improvement between Willamete and Northwood. When both run at 2Ghz in games the NW can be easily 15-20% faster. Northwood was arguable the only good Netburst CPU. IPC was OK, overclocking on the lower models was huge, it reached up to 3,4Ghz in the end, and then you also had the Gallatin variant with 2MB of L3. Prescott was a failure, more power hungry and IPC went down cause the pipeline got longer and the cache latency got much worse. Tejas got canceleed cause it was even worse than prescott, and Cedar Mill is just a die-shrink. It clocked high and power draw was massively imrpoved, but for year 2005/6 it was not good enough performance wise when AMd already had dualcore K8. And there is another thing, Netburst needs at least 256KB of L2 cache. If it does not have that the performance takes dive to disaster levels. The 128KB Celeron version at 3Ghz performs like K7 at 1Ghz at times, especially in games. Avoid the 128K Celerons at all costs.

    • @3DfxAslinger
      @3DfxAslinger Před 6 lety +4

      I also would say, that the Northwood core is the best Netburst CPU.

  • @UpLateGeek
    @UpLateGeek Před 6 lety +1

    Great video! Loved the detailed background info, really puts things in perspective.
    I remember being tempted to upgrade to the 1.4GHz Tualatin back in the day... right up until I found out my Via chipset board wasn't compatible. Couldn't afford a P4, so I ended up going AMD.
    Funnily enough, I never had any stability issues with the Via chipset, although I was running Nvidia cards, so I guess they were all running at AGP 2x and I never knew it until now!

    • @HappyBeezerStudios
      @HappyBeezerStudios Před 6 lety

      There are ways to pinmod it. And there are socket adapters that take care of the changed power delivery.

    • @philscomputerlab
      @philscomputerlab  Před 6 lety

      Yea you likely wouldn't notice the difference, but yea depends on what card you use :)

  • @smallmoneysalvia
    @smallmoneysalvia Před 6 lety +12

    Solid pronunciation on the core names. This is the first time I’ve heard BOTH tualatin AND willamette pronounced correctly by the same person on youtube.
    Well, you know, with an accent, tualatin in ‘Merican is “two all a tin”.

    • @philscomputerlab
      @philscomputerlab  Před 6 lety +2

      I tried :D

    • @nickwallette6201
      @nickwallette6201 Před 5 lety

      Not a native Oregonian, but I am a north-westerner with ties to Oregon. From what I've heard, "two ALL a tin" is actually right. I watched part of a speech from the mayor (or may have been ex-mayor at the time) where I remember he distinctly pronounced it that way as well.
      I have also heard "two AL a tin", though not as much. Could be I'm just talking to too many Portlanders. "Will AM it" is definitely correct though.
      Either way, not sure the ethnocentric disdain is really called for when Intel specifically named the cores after north-western locales in... "'Merica." That being the case, however the locals have chosen to pronounce the names of their towns (typically, in that area, being derived from a Native American word or phrase) is about as authoritative as it can get.

  • @larrybreavman4864
    @larrybreavman4864 Před 5 lety +1

    Absolutely agree with you. I'm a fan of S-370 platform and, time ago, I ran some benchmarks in order to compare my Tualatin 1400S with other P-III, P4 and Athlon XP processors. The first P4 which reached P-III 1450-S results was the Willamette 2 ghz.

  • @d4rks0m3thing
    @d4rks0m3thing Před 6 lety

    Waiting for my Radeon 9600pro to arrive so I can FINALLY finish my Tually build. Nice video!

  • @movax20h
    @movax20h Před 3 lety +1

    Awesome video. Minor correction about the SDRAM at 8:00, CL2, is CAS Latency = 2, not Cache Latency. :) CAS stands for Column Address Strobe.

  • @dabombinablemi6188
    @dabombinablemi6188 Před 4 lety +2

    Looking back at this, I'm very tempted to try and run a Willamette P4 inside a laptop that presently has a Northwood P4 HT 3.2GHz (which is old enough to not have the HT Intel sticker)

  • @CMDRSweeper
    @CMDRSweeper Před 6 lety +3

    Fun fact is that the Core processors were built on the Pentium 3 developments rather than the Pentium 4.
    So the Pentium 4 is tech that comes to a dead end.

  • @martijnvanzanen4075
    @martijnvanzanen4075 Před 6 lety +1

    Nice video. Was hoping to see a Duron 1200 as well ( or 1400), and ofcourse not to forget the thunderbird.

  • @blabblab5589
    @blabblab5589 Před 6 lety +7

    the P3's Tualatins were faster than the first P4's it's a known fact.

  • @cemalgurel7704
    @cemalgurel7704 Před 3 lety +1

    I have overclocked Celeron 1200 to 1600 on Asus P3C-E mainboard with Asus slot/socket converter. But later, I have upgraded to Asus P4T-E mainboard with Pentium 4 3,06 GHz with HT. They were very well, my graphics cards, one of them was Matrox G550 AGP. Later nVidia 6000 something with 256 MB ram. I have very good time with them at the past. For a short time, I also used normal sized Intel mainboard at the video with a 2000 MHz Celeron processor. Intel mainboard was not allowing overclocking, but a single pin when blocked, it was working at 133 MHz speed bus. So with pin modding, it has worked at 2666 MHz really fine, later I sold it....

  • @azminek7154
    @azminek7154 Před 5 lety +3

    While I have a soft spot for Northwood, as I had that for the majority of the 2000s, my favorit early 2k platform is the Pentium 3 and the Tualatin at that. It's fast and cool and silent. P4 with the stock cooler can easily reach 70°C, especially the Prescott. I think out of all of my retro builds I use my Tualatin the most and maybe the Pentium MMX the second.

  • @xiardark
    @xiardark Před 6 lety

    Great video! But how long did these processors stay relevant? My own comparisons show much of the same until games start using sse2. Though even those games were generally sse1 compatible. I have a different library of games, so of course any results I have would be different. Played more blizzard games around that time. I had the AMD Athlon back then though, and I'm sure I'm not the only one waiting to see the AMD Athlon 1.4Ghz enter the arena.

  • @soylentgreenb
    @soylentgreenb Před 6 lety +2

    Intel in the late 90's were projecting they would reach 8 GHz by 2003. That explains everything you need to know about the pentium 4 design.

  • @jddeluxe2242
    @jddeluxe2242 Před 5 lety +1

    Hi Phil, love your videos... Question for you. I recently built a Voodoo 2 SLI machine, running on a Pentium 4 Celeron @ 1.7ghz (Willamette, 128kb cache). I was wondering what speed Pentium III does this chip compare? I'm running Win98' and everything runs like butta, but just wanted to hear your thoughts on my chip and setup, and if the lack of L2 cache is holding me back at all. Appreciate it!

    • @philscomputerlab
      @philscomputerlab  Před 5 lety

      Not sure, but it should have plenty of performance for V2 SLI, especially at higher resolutions.

  • @jaybird57
    @jaybird57 Před rokem +1

    I built a dual Tualatin socket 370 gigabyte motherboard back in the day... with a radeon 9700 all in wonder it kicked ass. I had to run win 2000, then xp pro... used it for a long time.

  • @HeyImGaminOverHere
    @HeyImGaminOverHere Před 6 lety

    Oh man the PrescHOTT CPU.... I had the 3GHz 478 version on an Abit IS7 and the stock cooler was NO WHERE NEAR close to keeping that CPU cool! I had to get a zalman CNPS7000 if I remember right. Wonderful video Phil!!

  • @-Kerstin
    @-Kerstin Před 6 lety

    Will be awesome to hear you talk about the times AMD was on top in IPC

  • @aceofhearts573
    @aceofhearts573 Před 4 lety

    I always wondered. Is RDRAM set up with dual data rate like the later DDR SDRAM or is it single data rate?

  • @QuantumBraced
    @QuantumBraced Před 4 lety

    I like how you can see the traces on old motherboards.

  • @allesbelegt
    @allesbelegt Před 5 lety

    Out of couriosity: Are you planing somewhere in the future a comparision between the Tualatin-Pentium with 512kb L2 and the Version with 256kb, to see, how the amount of cache influence the performance?

  • @AndrewTJackson
    @AndrewTJackson Před 6 lety

    What are the results for the P III vs the later P4 when the P III is overclocked please, especially with that bigger monster cooler please?

  • @kevgardner3064
    @kevgardner3064 Před 4 lety

    wished you try overclocking the tualatin to compete the northwood as i have had mine up to 2ghz on air

  • @liliwinnt6
    @liliwinnt6 Před 6 lety

    what about trying some socket 370 platform with DDR memory support like SiS635T chipset? and does intel 820 chipset support tualatin processors?

  • @pavelperina7629
    @pavelperina7629 Před 2 lety

    I had north and south bridge on Intel DP35DP motherboard that I used from late 2007 to early 2015. I sort of wonder how do they compare to Raspberry PI.
    What annoys me on PentiumIII is that all coolers seem to have like 5cm fan running at 6K RPM.

  • @jinyang8564
    @jinyang8564 Před 9 dny +1

    yeah I remember this. it was just way too long ago I barely remember when I had similar setups comparing them. the real experience with early willamette pen4s were more horryfing as far as i remember. pen4 era was the time where frequency speed started becoming questionable to increase performance. it probably took until intels core architecture got released which it significantly changed the overall architecture to improve performance per clock sharing l2 cache and adapting multicores structure.

  • @LeSmokinCola
    @LeSmokinCola Před 6 lety

    What's with the holes through the IHS ? I am intrigued

  • @matthewday7565
    @matthewday7565 Před 6 lety

    The clock speed vs. performance issue was really highlighted when it came to Core 2 vs P4 - now how did Intel spin that one?

  • @RiskyBRiskyB
    @RiskyBRiskyB Před 4 lety +2

    There's a reason why Intel built the post-pentium 4/Pentium D chips from the Pentium 3 architecture.

  • @SneakiestDuke68
    @SneakiestDuke68 Před rokem

    Are you can test Pentium III-S Tualatin 1266 Mhz ?

  • @djmidnightwolf
    @djmidnightwolf Před 5 lety +1

    Phil, if you want to ever revisit this video, get an Asus TUA266. It has both SDR(3x1GB) and DDR(2x1GB) support. It uses the ALi Aladdin chipset. It was by far the best board I used in terms of overclocking for the Pentium 3 architecture.

  • @kombalaxy2671
    @kombalaxy2671 Před 6 lety +1

    Is there way I can get in contact with you? I have an absulote absured amount of DDR ram and I love watching your videos.

    • @philscomputerlab
      @philscomputerlab  Před 6 lety

      Thanks, but that won't be necessary, I have got a ton of RAM already :)

  • @modernandretrogaming
    @modernandretrogaming Před 6 lety

    Great movie :) Do you test some celerons in future and compare them to P3/P4 and some Athlon 1300/1400 ?

  • @willemborst7912
    @willemborst7912 Před 6 lety

    phil can you make a P3 tualatin vs the fastest S478 P4 review? it would be interesting to see how the do at the same speed so 1.4 vs 1.4 but with al the cache etc on there normal speeds/modes

  • @valparaisosting
    @valparaisosting Před 6 lety

    Hi Phil,on the via chipset with the agp issue, do you mean to put the value from DA to EA,are we taking about the same? Thanks for answer 🖒🖒🖒

  • @valparaisosting
    @valparaisosting Před 6 lety

    Hi Phil, so in the agp driving value bios item, just type 128? Have you tried with nvidia ge 4 ti? Sorry for my English, greetings from Uruguay🖒🖒

  • @hassanjafary1666
    @hassanjafary1666 Před 3 lety

    hi phil , i have 848 mobo from gigabyte with support for 400mhz ddr and a pentium 4 northwood at 2.0ghz and Hyundai ddr400mhz , BUT i can't get 400mhz from ddr. it runs at 266mhz what the hell!
    what can i do?
    i already updated the bios to the latest one.

  • @CaptainSpicard
    @CaptainSpicard Před rokem +1

    I really do regret not getting the Tualatin at the time. I had a 1.5GHz Wilamette, and my friends AMD systems we're wrecking me in framerates and cost. The only saving grace was Quake 3. Ah, early 2000's PC's.

  • @allesbelegt
    @allesbelegt Před 6 lety

    Depending on the country you live, you get the arctic copper silent and similar heatsinks new and unused for next to nothing. Also for socket 478, you can get good period correct heatsinks for cheap.

  • @kokodin5895
    @kokodin5895 Před 6 lety

    i loved my pentium 3 s 1400 running at 1575 mhz on via chipset with 1,5 gb of sdram
    i should run your benchmarks to see how much would that demolish pentium 4
    can pentium 4 at 1,4-1,7ghz playback 720p mp4 or 8bit matroska (without subtitles) files?
    I am interested how bigger memory bandwidth and sse2 instruction set could handle video decoding.

  • @MarcWeavers
    @MarcWeavers Před 6 lety

    with VIA chipsets, i often had problems getting AGP cards to work in their AGP mode, this was due to one of the PCI to PCI bridges using the basic driver instead of the PCI to AGP driver, which i had to install manually, works great afterwards though :)

  • @computercatgaming02
    @computercatgaming02 Před 5 lety +1

    I'd say I'm a little biased due to how I've just had a few Pentium 4s and no Pentium III so this video is really interesting even to little me because it shows how Intel went backwards instead of forward with the Pentium 4.
    Good job Phil!

    • @azminek7154
      @azminek7154 Před 5 lety

      @RavenPrecept I'd rather say they were faster bot they ran even hotter. Intel completely lost balance until the introduction of the Core2.

  • @expressfax5420
    @expressfax5420 Před 4 lety

    I have pentium 2 mmx 240mhz cpu win 98se : p the pc still works what should l do with it

  • @theottergames1969
    @theottergames1969 Před 6 lety

    Please do the dual tualatin configuration, it would be so awesome. total beast :)

  • @finkelroy211
    @finkelroy211 Před 2 lety +1

    Back in the day, I had a P4 1.6. I currently have several P4 CPUs but I am not going to build a Willamette machine. I am going to build a 2.4GHz Northwood instead. The reason being is I need a dedicated machine for Star Force and SecuROM games and I need a little more power than a Willamette can muster. To play the early XP games I played on my P4, I am building a PIII 1000EB with a similar GF3 card to what I had back then. I don't think I will be hampered by a 512MB memory limit. My P4 had 1GB of DDR RAM.
    I also have a P4 650 HT machine with a 7800GTX

  • @freddyfredrickson
    @freddyfredrickson Před 6 lety

    Why 3 memory slots? I thought they always come in single or even numbers.

    • @stamasd8500
      @stamasd8500 Před 6 lety +3

      Ahahah yeah these days they do... but back in the SDRAM days memory wasn't installed in pairs. Before and after, yes but 168-pin SDRAM was self-contained, didn't need to be paired. I remember my first computer I built, PII on BX motherboard, 3 RAM slots. I started with a 64MB stick, later I added a 128MB stick, and even later a 256MB stick. 448MB total, seems an odd number but it worked perfectly.

  • @CHA0SHACKER
    @CHA0SHACKER Před 8 měsíci

    Hey Phil, whats the name of this Socket 370 board? it looks nice

    • @philscomputerlab
      @philscomputerlab  Před 8 měsíci +1

      Not sure the video is quite old now. If it's not mentioned in the video then I don't know 😞

    • @CHA0SHACKER
      @CHA0SHACKER Před 8 měsíci +1

      :/
      I know it's somewhat older but i looks like one of the few i815 boards with the audio section intact. That's why I'm asking.@@philscomputerlab

  • @freefalcon23
    @freefalcon23 Před 6 lety

    Hey Phil, my apologies for not asking a video appropriate question, but I have a 286 and 4 sticks of 1MB ram, the motherboard I have is an Octek Fox II Rev 3.0 and it had 12 DIP memory chips(that I removed), which accounted for 1MB of ram total. After putting the 4x1mb sticks, my system only detects 1MB and I get a parity error very often, unless I remove 2 sticks and run with 512k of ram. Do you happen to know why the ram isn't detected as 4mb and why it crashes with 4 sticks? Also, I forgot to say, the motherboard's manual specifies that it can run up to 4mb of ram, and something about bios shadow(which I can't see in my bios for some reason).

    • @philscomputerlab
      @philscomputerlab  Před 6 lety +1

      I work with 386 and higher, I can only offer generic advice like checking the manual for supported configurations and trying other modules?

    • @freefalcon23
      @freefalcon23 Před 6 lety

      Okay, thanks, I'll see if I can get my hands on some more sticks, as the manual implied that the motherboard can run 1mb x 4

  • @joncarter3761
    @joncarter3761 Před 6 lety

    Just wondering if there are any GPU bottleneck issues with using the P3 over the P4? I'm only asking because back in 2004 I upgraded from a ATi 9800 Pro to an ATi X800 XL and my poor Athlon XP 3000+ made the X800 perform worse than the 9800! (literally talking about 10-25 fps lows and over 80 fps highs with constant stuttering on Half Life 2, regardless of resolution or detail settings) I'd hate to see someone in the same position as I was, especially considering how much of a premium some of the top performing retro cards are going for now.

    • @philscomputerlab
      @philscomputerlab  Před 6 lety

      Odd, as the X800 is basically two 9800s combined, there shouldn't be much of a difference.

    • @joncarter3761
      @joncarter3761 Před 6 lety

      It is really weird, knew it was CPU bottle necking once I swapped from an XP Athlon to a Pentium 4 Prescott Core and got similar FPS to the Toms Hardware performance graphs. Weirdly enough though the XP Athlon worked perfectly with a Geforce 6800, it might have been driver overhead (AI Catalyst was new at the time) or possibly the N-Force chipset wasn't updated for the newer ATi cards (wouldn't be the first time Nvidia did dodgy stuff like that).

    • @philscomputerlab
      @philscomputerlab  Před 6 lety

      Ah yes, driver overhead is certainly possible. Under 98 it's much more of mess than under XP, XP is more consistent.

  • @MadHatter123456
    @MadHatter123456 Před 6 lety

    I used a Pentium M Socket 479 using an adapter on a S478 board. Stock clock was 1.6GHz iirc, ran overclocked at almost 2.4 GHz and it shredded every modern Pentium 4 at that time.
    Good times.

  • @blairlohnes8103
    @blairlohnes8103 Před 6 lety +3

    I still salivate over the 1.4 Tualatin Pentium 3. I had a Celeron 1.1 @ 1.4 back in the day and it was okay for the price, but no where near the P3. It seemed like CPU speeds were progressing so much more back then.

  • @georgez8859
    @georgez8859 Před 6 lety

    Great Video Phil, Thanks for all the info. The Pentium III was an awesome Processor.I have one of these coolers on my Pentium 4 , works great. you can still find them for sale with a little searching. THERMALTAKE A4012-02 TR2-M12

  • @paulretrocomputingroom

    Merci beaucoup Phil !
    J'ai tout récemment fait l'acquisition d'une Gigabyte GA-6OXT avec un Pentium III S 1266mhz que j'ai pû overclocker à 1624mhz et le Celeron 1300mhz à 1729mhz , j'ai pû faire mes tests et j'en ai conclu la même chose que toi ! Vraiment excellent ces Tualatin, je vais me construire une machine pour les jeux et les logiciels rétro, merci pour tes conseils 😁😁

  • @juanmanuelloujedo9496
    @juanmanuelloujedo9496 Před měsícem

    Hello, nice video, The pentium 4 Willmate 1.4Ghz comes in 478 Socket? because i knew that only comes in 423 Socket!

  • @Elios0000
    @Elios0000 Před 6 lety +3

    like to see that P3 Tualatin vs some 2000~2001 era AMD stuff like the Gen 1 Slot A Athlon and later Athlon Thunderbirds

    • @philscomputerlab
      @philscomputerlab  Před 6 lety +1

      Yea just a matter of time.

    • @HappyBeezerStudios
      @HappyBeezerStudios Před 6 lety +1

      Yeah, throw in a nice T-bird.
      And maybe do a comparison how Coppermine holds up against Willamette and Northwood.

  • @ponysoftonline4533
    @ponysoftonline4533 Před 6 lety +2

    Been wanting to get a Tualitin core Pentium III For my main rig now I want one even more

  • @allesbelegt
    @allesbelegt Před 6 lety

    Will there somewhere in the future a similar video about Athlon vs Athlon XP?

    • @philscomputerlab
      @philscomputerlab  Před 6 lety

      For sure we will look at that, but there is little overlap, the XP went on with higher clock speeds.

  • @Synthematix
    @Synthematix Před 4 lety

    best p3 motherboard i ever owned was in 2000, QDI LEGEND socket 370 with a p3 866, it was awesome. cas 0.5

  •  Před 6 lety +3

    Pentium 3 rules in Phil hands !

  • @AmyGrrl78
    @AmyGrrl78 Před 4 lety

    I've really been wanting to build myself a Pentium 3 machine. I already have a P3 1Ghz EB CPU. Been debating about getting a P3 1.4Ghz CPU. I really want to set up the PC run DOS, Win98SE and WinXP. Have at least 1GB of RAM and 1 ISA slot on the motherboard. Stable AGP 4x slot would be great as well. Been wondering if I need to stick with the P3 1Ghz EB CPU if I want those features on the motherboard. Need to do some research on what motherboard I should get.

    • @miljororforsprakpartiet290
      @miljororforsprakpartiet290 Před rokem

      Why a 1.4 when you already have 1.0? Debate also whether or not win98 is worth the instability with >512MB RAM. Old DOS games will throw RTE200 with Intel >200MHz CPUs (some can be patched though, AMD CPUs don't have the problem). AGP? You'll want Voodoo for Glide. So much better effects in many games.
      I'd invest in the PIII-1000 (or why not, an Extreme Edition P4) for newer games, and a K6 or sub-200MHz Intel machine for DOS games. XP and 95 exclusively; 98SE fills no gap and freezes constantly.

  • @kinxofsepluv
    @kinxofsepluv Před 6 lety

    I think would be interesting to put head to head one on an early Core to a Late Pentium 4, and compare their architecture heritage.

  • @Schattennebel
    @Schattennebel Před 5 lety +1

    Would a LGA X38 MoBo with a Xeon 3360, 4 GB DDR2 RAM, a 7900 GTX and Windows XP a good Choice for a Retro Direct X9 Gaming PC?

  • @SOU6900
    @SOU6900 Před 2 lety +1

    Recently I began to wish there was someone producing new boards that are socketed for vintage CPUs like Socket A Athlons or even Slot 1 Pentiums, and go as far as to design the power delivery to work with modern PSUs.

  • @titotech
    @titotech Před 6 lety +9

    Phil, you are GOD!
    i always wanted to see this comparison..
    Makes me remember when i was a kid, an friend from school told me the: "new p4 with rambus will kill everything from hardware we have now"
    he was wrong.. lol..
    it is possible to run aida(everest) memory and cache benchmark to see the diferences of bandwidth from pc133 to rambus 800mhz?

  • @bobhumplick4213
    @bobhumplick4213 Před 6 lety

    i remeber wanting 2 celeron 300's for the abit bp9? bp6? the dual socket one. they would clock from 300 up to 450 and you could unlock dual socket support. and then i wanted one of these p3's for sure when they came out. intel should have just stuck with the p3 and added an execution unit or 2 and done a few tweaks.

  • @Nachokinz
    @Nachokinz Před 6 lety +1

    While technically; socket 423 boards can run 3 ghz northwood processors via 423-478 socket adapters along with standard atx psus via 20 pin/6 pin aux adapters, the components to expand it beyond willamette are rare and cost prohibitive. Really unfortunate for those who did invest in the first generation getting burned soon afterwards. Unless one has other reasons for doing so; socket 423 is not worth it.

  • @AshenTechDotCom
    @AshenTechDotCom Před 3 lety +1

    every person i know whos had a p3-tu overclocked them to at least 1.6-1.7x range... it still ran cooler then the p4 on the equiv cooler...

  • @bobhumplick4213
    @bobhumplick4213 Před 6 lety +9

    whats the accent? sounds like german and australian mixed?

    • @pc-sound-legacy
      @pc-sound-legacy Před 5 lety +4

      I've got the same thought, and i am german. Sounds familiar to me.

    • @jm036
      @jm036 Před 4 lety +3

      That's exactly what it is...

    • @HappyBeezerStudios
      @HappyBeezerStudios Před 3 lety

      Wouldn't that make it ..... austrian

  • @notyobiz6207
    @notyobiz6207 Před 3 lety

    ddr1 was introduced on intel 845? isn't there a socket 370 with ddr1? also, the important question; does that mobo support tualatin. i've seen ppl do 1.6ghz

    • @talvisota327
      @talvisota327 Před 3 lety

      yeah i have a via-based server board with 2x socket 370 and ddr1 ram. i think it came out later than the 845 though.

    • @notyobiz6207
      @notyobiz6207 Před 3 lety

      @@talvisota327 did do a google and 845 is the earliest i see intel supporting it

  • @Stefan.Stefanov
    @Stefan.Stefanov Před 6 lety

    I found an old 250W power sypply AT format with 8P and 9P connectors (No 20/24 pin and 4pin). What are they? I've never seen before such connectors. They look ancient :) and btw, the PSU works.

    • @renerebe
      @renerebe Před 6 lety

      AT connectors are for mostly pre-Pentium boards, 486, 386, and even older: czcams.com/video/pC4JCPb4v1Q/video.html