Original Link: https://www.anandtech.com/show/666
Weekly CPU & Video Card Price Guide: 3rd Edition
by Vlad Trishkin on November 24, 2000 12:00 PM EST- Posted in
- Guides
Introduction
Our third weekly price guide is here. This time around we have more then enough new hardware to discuss, and put a price on.
This article is designed to guide you through all of the latest price changes on selected products. For ease of use we broke our guide into two main sections: CPU/Video card Prices and Memory/Motherboard prices. Each guide will be updated and replaced every other week, meaning that today you will see CPU and Video card prices, while the Memory/Motherboard Price Guide is scheduled for next Friday.
The basic goal is to provide you with the best deals, and show you the progress of listed products. We have selected a leading team of on-line vendors, and will be tracking their progress on weekly bases. Please note that all vendors were selected according to their best price offered. Some vendors may ask that you place a phone-order to make sure that you receive our listed price; others simply ask that you mention a list where you found the price (In this case AnandTech). We have tried to eliminate vendors with low feedback rating, but we do encourage you to do some sort of a rating research before purchasing any product from this list.
If you encounter any problems with a vendor on our list, please email us, and we will take appropriate action. Remember that we will only list vendors with positive customer feedback. If you have any suggestions, don't hesitate to let me know.
Also be sure to check out AnandTech's Hot Deals Forum for even more great CPU, video card and other technology buys.
Disclamer
AnandTech does not endorse any vendor listed in the following price guide. AnandTech does not receive any advertising fees or/and sponsorship contracts from the listed vendors. All views expressed by listed vendors do not reflect the opinions of AnandTech.
AnandTech, nor any of the vendors mentioned guarantee that the prices listed in this guide.
This week
This week is a very special one here at AnandTech. The Pentium 4 was officially released, and prices on the "old" Pentium 3 parts will start to drop, as soon as Intel can produce enough Pentium 4 CPU's. So far we haven't been affected by any price cuts, but next few weeks will be very interesting to monitor.
Nothing major is happening over on AMD's side, other then the gradual price drops.
Intel CPUs
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Pentium 4 - 1.5GHz (400) |
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Pentium 4 - 1.4GHz (400) |
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Pentium III - 1.13GHz (133) |
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Pentium III - 1.0GHz (133) |
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Pentium III - 933MHz (133) |
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Pentium III - 866MHz (133) |
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Pentium III - 850Mhz (100) |
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Pentium III - 800MHz (133) |
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Pentium III - 800Mhz (100) |
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Pentium III - 750Mhz (100) |
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Pentium III - 733MHz (133) |
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Pentium III - 700Mhz (100) |
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Pentium III - 667Mhz (133) |
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Pentium III - 650Mhz (100) |
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Pentium III - 600MHz (E-133) |
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Pentium III - 600MHz (E-100) |
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Pentium III - 550MHz (E-100) |
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Pentium III - 500Mhz (E-100) |
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Celeron 766 FC-PGA |
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Celeron 733 FC-PGA |
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Celeron 700 FC-PGA |
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Celeron 667 FC-PGA |
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Celeron 633 FC-PGA |
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Celeron 600 FC-PGA |
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Celeron 566 FC-PGA |
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Celeron 533 FC-PGA |
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The
Intel Pentium 4 has dropped to its suggested retailing price as soon as Pentium
4 reviews started to pop up around the net. Intel claims that each Pentium
4 will be bundled with two sticks of 64MB RDRAM (PC800), but this does not
apply to OEM CPUs. Anyhow, a price drop of over $150 for the 1.4GHz part,
and $250 for the 1.5GHz part is expected since vendors that attempted to jump
the gun on the Pentium 4 release were obviously overcharging for the processors.
The time to upgrade to a 1GHz Pentium 3 is now for many people, and a price
drop of $12 only makes it sweeter. If having a top of the line CPU is not
your way to be, we reserved the lower priced best buy models for you. This
week they are the 850MHz (100MHz FSB) and the 866MHz (133MHz FSB) parts, depending
on whether or not you have a motherboard that can support the 133MHz FSB.
You can go even lower with the 700MHz (100MHz FSB) and the 733MHz (133MHz
FSB) CPU's, which won't burn a hole in your wallet.
Most veteran overclockers know the advantages on having a CPU with a 100MHz
FSB clock opposed to the 133MHz FSB clock, and most current 700MHz (100MHz
FSB) Pentium 3's easily hit 933MHz or more, assuming the motherboard and memory
are able to handle the higher FSB speeds. Most current Pentium 3's are still
based on the cB0 stepping, but luckily newer and higher yield cC0 based parts
will dominate in the next few weeks.
The FC-PGA Celerons are still in bloom, and they still make for great upgrade
options on older motherboards, which are mostly based on Intel's BX and LX
chipsets. Celerons are legendary overclockers, and a good percentage of current
parts make it all the way up to 100MHz FSB (66MHz FSB is default), so we especially
recommend the 566 and the 700MHz models. We are still waiting for a price
drop on the new 733 and 766MHz models, but for now the prices on them are
ridiculously high, you are better off buying a Pentium 3 for the same amount
of money.
Related Reviews
Make sure you check out our latest Intel Pentium III Coppermine and Intel Celeron FC-PGA reviews for more information.
Pentium III Reviews
Publication Date
Intel Pentium III 1.13GHz (1133MHz)
July 31st, 2000 5:10 AM
Intel Pentium III 933
May 24th, 2000 12:17 AM
Intel Pentium III 866, 850
March 20th, 2000 12:24 AM
Intel Pentium III 1GHz
March 8th, 2000 8:00 AM
Intel Pentium III 800 & 750 "Coppermine"
December 20th, 1999 4:28 AM
Intel Pentium III E FC-PGA (Socket-370)
October 26th, 1999 11:22 PM
Intel Pentium III E "Coppermine" (Slot-1)
October 25th, 1999 7:21 PM
Celeron Reviews
Publication Date
Intel Celeron 700
June 26th, 2000 1:03 AM
Overclocking the FC-PGA Celeron
April 17th, 2000 5:28 AM
Intel Celeron 600 "Coppermine128"
March 29th, 2000 2:10 AM
AMD CPUs
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Athlon Thunderbird 1.2GHz (266) |
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Athlon Thunderbird 1.13GHz (266) |
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Athlon Thunderbird 1.0GHz (266) |
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Athlon Thunderbird 1.2GHz |
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Athlon Thunderbird 1.1GHz |
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Athlon Thunderbird 1.0GHz |
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Athlon Thunderbird 950MHz |
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Athlon Thunderbird 900MHz |
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Athlon Thunderbird 850MHz |
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Athlon Thunderbird 800MHz |
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Athlon Thunderbird 750MHz |
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Athlon Thunderbird 700MHz |
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Athlon 1.0GHz |
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Athlon 950MHz |
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Athlon 900MHz |
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Athlon 850MHz |
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Athlon 800MHz |
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Athlon 750MHz |
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Athlon 700MHz |
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Athlon 650MHz |
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Athlon 600MHz |
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Athlon 550MHz |
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Athlon 500MHz |
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Duron 800MHz |
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Duron 750MHz |
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Duron 700MHz |
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Duron 650MHz |
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Duron 600MHz |
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AMD is the quiet duck in the pond this week, and the prices aren't changing dramatically. We can expect the new 266MHz FSB Thunderbird models to show up online within 10 or so days, but for now the 200MHz FSB 1.2GHz Thunderbird is our pick as the fastest AMD CPU.
Current Thunderbirds are what most people are looking for in a high performance CPU, but the high-end "Classic" Athlons are dropping enough in price to make you want a faster part if you are stuck with a Slot-A motherboard.
Durons are shining as always, but you have to go for the lower end (up to 700MHz) part to get the most "bang for a buck". Purchasing a 750 or 800MHz Duron doesn't make too much sense at this point, our suggestion is to add a little extra and buy the 700 or 750Mhz Thunderbird.
Overclocking AMD's CPU's isn't too much of a hassle, it is still not as easy
as overclocking Intel CPU's in which case you don't need any 3rd party tools
at all, but it can be done. Overclocking Slot-A parts requires soldering of
the multiplier resistors, but a faster and easier solution is a simple GFD.
Overclocking all Socket-A CPU's requires the simple "L1 bridge connection
trick", and a motherboard which supports multiplier adjustment. For more
information check out our latest Socket-A
Overclocking Guide.
Related Reviews
Make sure you check out our latest Athlon and Duron reviews for more information.
Athlon Reviews
Publication Date
AMD's 760 Chipset: DDR for the Athlon is here
October 30th, 2000 5:29 AM
AMD Athlon "Thunderbird" 1.2GHz & Duron 800MHz
October 17th, 2000 12:56 AM
DDR SDRAM - AMD Athlon Performance Preview
September 14th, 2000 3:56 AM
AMD Athlon "Thunderbird" 1.1GHz
August 28th, 2000 12:00 PM
AMD Athlon "Thunderbird" 1 GHz / 800 MHz
June 4th, 2000 10:10 PM
AMD Athlon 1GHz, 950MHz, 900MHz
March 6th, 2000 12:20 AM
AMD Athlon 850
February 14th, 2000 12:00 PM
AMD Athlon 800
December 20th, 1999 4:47 AM
AMD Athlon 750
November 29th, 1999 1:16 AM
AMD Athlon 700
October 4th, 1999 12:19 AM
AMD Athlon
August 9th, 1999 7:37 PM
Duron Reviews
Publication Date
AMD Duron 800MHz
October 17th, 2000 12:56 AM
AMD Duron 750
September 5th, 2000 12:00 PM
AMD Duron
June 19th, 2000 12:00 PM
Video Cards
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3dfx Voodoo5 5500 AGP |
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3dfx Voodoo5 5500 PCI |
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3dfx Voodoo4 4500 AGP |
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3dfx Voodoo4 4500 PCI |
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3dfx Voodoo3 3500TV AGP |
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ATI RADEON 64MB DDR |
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ATI RADEON 32MB DDR |
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ATI RADEON 32MB SDR |
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ATI RADEON ALL-IN-WONDER |
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ATI RADEON VE 32MB DDR |
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NVIDIA GeForce2 ULTRA 64MB |
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NVIDIA GeForce2 PRO 64MB |
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NVIDIA GeForce2 GTS 64MB |
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NVIDIA GeForce2 GTS 32MB |
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NVIDIA GeForce2 GTS 32MB VIVO (ASUS V7700 Deluxe) |
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NVIDIA GeForce2 MX 32MB |
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Matrox G450 |
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Matrox G400 |
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Matrox G400 DualHead |
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We have greatly expanded our video cards section, now it holds most of the current video cards from leading manufacturers.
The 3dfx Voodoo5 line has plummeted more then $50, and now buying a Voodoo5
card actually is a good solution. The price is still a little bit above the
faster NVIDIA GeForce2 GTS 32MB, but finally the Voodoo5 is able to compete
to some extent. This price cut is critical for system integrators and OEM
vendors.
We are anxiously waiting for the ATI
RADEON VE, which promises to integrate RADEON DDR 3D performance with
unmatched 2D multimonitor support. Unfortunately it seems like it won't be
available until February of next year, which could end up hurting ATI.
NVIDIA is on top of their game, as always. Their current line of GeForce2
cards is holding all the performance positions. The GeForce2 MX is our pick
for a low-end 3D card, while the GeForce 2 GTS 32MB and the GeForce2 GTS 64MB
are our high-end 3D picks. If you must have the fastest 3D in the industry,
the GeForce2 PRO and ULTRA are your tickets to the fast lane.
Related Reviews
Make sure you check out our latest Voodoo4/5, Radeon, GeForce2 and G400/450 reviews for more information.
Video Card Reviews
Publication Date
3dfx Voodoo5 5500AGP
July 11th, 2000
3dfx Voodoo4 4500AGP
October 23rd, 2000
ATI Radeon 64MB DDR
July 17th, 2000
ATI Radeon 32MB SDR
October 13th, 2000
NVIDIA GeForce 2 GTS 32MB
April 26th, 2000
NVIDIA GeForce 2 GTS 64MB
June 21st, 2000
NVIDIA GeForce2 Ultra
August 14th, 2000
NVIDIA GeForce2 MX
June 28th, 2000
ASUS V7700 Deluxe (32MB GeForce2 GTS VIVO)
November 3rd, 2000
Matrox Millennium G400 & G400MAX
May 20th, 1999
Matrox Millennium G450
September 5th, 2000