The Athlon XP’s are all Socket A or Socket 462–same socket, two different names. Which LanParty board are you looking at? The LanParty NFII will work, but the NF3 and NF4’s won’t since they’re for the Athlon 64/Athlon FX.
While I don’t see anything inheritly wrong with sticking to the Socket A platform, it’s a dead horse. For the money you’ll spend, I’d highly recommend you start with the nForce 3 or nForce 4.
I don’t know what your current setup is, but for best results, you’re going to want to upgrade the CPU, motherboard, RAM, and probably video card at once. Depending on the power supply, you may need to upgrade that too.
If you went NF3/4 you’d need a speedy 64 chip like you thought. The very basic difference between skt 939 and 754 is 754 has a 64-bit memory controller while 939 has 128-bit controller I believe. Also 939 offers dual-channel memory while 754 doesn’t. Currently the cheapest 939 skt chip is the 3000+ as I have, the over all best bang for the buck chip is the 3500 which is real nice, around 150 pounds or so?
I can say from experience that processor is a beast, and that price is very good.
And my mobo is an asus AV8, so same name, same quality :P. And my board is awesome.
Waffles is right, excellent deals for both, what I’ve got to. I didn’t know DD2 would work with that mobo, thought it was mostly an Intel thing as of now, oh well, cool.
DDR2 will not work with any AMD-based system at this time. There’s talk of it happening down the line, but it’s a new technology that needs to hit higher clock speeds to be effective. The second part is that the memory controller is integrated into the CPU on Athlon 64’s/FX’s/Opterons, and right now, they only support DDR.
Yeah, while the Asus A8N-SLI is a pretty good board, SLI is still in it’s early stages. It’s getting better, and is much improved over how it was a few months ago, but unless you can’t sleep if you don’t have the highest frames you can get out of your system—and a fat wallet—SLI probably isn’t for you. Now, this isn’t to say most geeks don’t dream of a tricked out SLI system, but it’s either too costly or simply more than they need.
I’m not a big Epox fan, but I’ve been hearing some good things about their 9NPA+ Ultra (non-SLI) and 9NPA+ SLI boards. They tend to have stuff that’s a bit cheaper than Asus and Abit, which you might want to look into (as well as some reviews before you buy).
ASUS A8V (look for revision 2) - 73.44 Dabs
Athlon 64 3000 - 93.00 Dabs
GeIL Value 2x512 - 76.32 - Overclockers
HeatSink ThermalRight XP-90 - 26.44 Overclockers (might be a bit too much for what I need)
Panaflo (MMM) FBL 92-L1A 7.29 www.dorothybradbury.co.uk
Antec P160 Case 72.97 Amazon
Tagan TG480-U01 480W 58.69 - Overclockers
Well, if you want to go for lots of overclocking, that may not be the best board to go for. Don’t get me wrong, Asus makes great boards to get up and go, but if you’re serious about overclocking, you really might want to look at DFI if they’re available. Otherwise, you might find the Abit to be a little bit better for OC’ing.
For overclocking it’s:
-Abit
-DFI
-Epox
Personally, I am not a big fan of Epox due to some piss-poor quality Socket A boards. If you’re going to stick with an AGP motherboard, then I’d say go with Abit’s AV8.