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Forum Discussion
cpitchford
May 22, 2009Guide
More on CPU specs of the ReadyNAS Pro
Hi all, Does anyone know what FSB speeds the ReadyNAS Pro motherboard supports. I have three "servers" that I'm trying to consolidate. I figured that the file server (which is actually the slowe...
sander11
Dec 29, 2013Aspirant
I just took the plunge and upgraded (again!) to a q6600 from an original upgrade to an e7400. After upgrading the enclosure.db it appears to be working normally, albeit a little hotter and noisier than it did before.
I'm still digging around to see if this is something where I messed up somewhere or this is the new normal. I was initially very reticent about the procedure, but modern cpu switching is pretty painless. From my experience the e series upgrade is generally a drop in which will run cooler, whereas the q chip requires editing some configuration files and, so far, does run hotter.
I'm still digging around to see if this is something where I messed up somewhere or this is the new normal. I was initially very reticent about the procedure, but modern cpu switching is pretty painless. From my experience the e series upgrade is generally a drop in which will run cooler, whereas the q chip requires editing some configuration files and, so far, does run hotter.
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