Most 775 sockets cannot reliably support the higher power demand, and the older architecture does not have a "safety" to prevent the pwm side of the cpu power downconverter (voltage regulator)from quite literally starting on fire. You have been warned. I've done this mod before when competing in benchmark competitions where they set standards like "socket limited to this" or similar. Ive seen voltage regulator side temps north of 240 degrees. As already stated be ABSOLUTELY sure the board supports the high current quad cores (hint...very few support the Q9650 or QX9650) Also I would not mod the socket itself...ever. Much better to simply buy the drill jig on
ebay for like 12 bucks... the stickers for the pin swap can be had in 100 qty for 20 or 30 bucks. Still I warn everyone...I do not do this for retail purposes, xeons while in that era had nearly identical dies usually any die that had a thermal output or power requirement out of spec became a xeon...its just how they did things, similar to how AMD chose to shut cores off and sell the CPU anyways because a core wouldnt run at stock voltage.
FYI, I would not run X, X uses alot of electricity, I'd rather run a E5450
The office rig is a water cooled ASUS P35D ROG board with an X5492 and the voltage regulators are all heatsinked and have a dedicated set of fans. Obviously...its a computer not left running when I'm not there. Because I am a bit paranoid everything runs of a thermal monitor and shuts the computer off should the VR get too hot...
Also...xeons ARE more reliable...they can take more heat, more voltage irregularities and input instability than the core 2 quad. It's why they are server/workstation class. Some guys used to think there were some differences in architecture but Intel later said they are literally identical die architectures with the difference being the xeons were the top XX% from tested dies.
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