3D Rendering and Encoding

Going along with the Futuremark application suites, we have some other benchmarks that test general system performance. Unlike Futuremark, 3D rendering and video encoding both stand to benefit a lot from quad core processors, and it is here that we expect the Gateway FX530 to show the largest improvements over the other systems. If the QX6700 is already the fastest solution in these benchmarks, a 20% overclock should only improve upon the already excellent performance.

General Performance - 3D Rendering

General Performance - 3D Rendering

General Performance - Encoding

General Performance - Encoding

General Performance - Encoding

General Performance - Encoding

In these particular tasks, the Gateway FX530 excels. As expected, the overclocked processor helps it to place at the top of the charts in every one of these benchmarks. The improvement relative to a stock QX6700 with DDR2-800 memory ranges from 12.5% up to 20%. In the case of the iTunes test, the Gateway system even scores 45% higher than the nearest competitor, and we're not quite sure why. We shouldn't see more than a 20% performance improvement relative to a stock QX6700, so either the encoder settings were different or differing versions of the iTunes improved performance. Either way, a 3.2 GHz Core 2 Quad processor is going to be more than happy doing 3D rendering or video encoding. It's too bad that not many other applications can utilize all four processor cores this well.

General Performance Gaming Performance
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  • JarredWalton - Friday, February 9, 2007 - link

    I've used a Dell XPS 410, and other than the top-end 700/710 most of the XPS cases are pretty drab as well. That said, I'm one of those people that prefers function over form, and in some instances PCs that others think look great I find to be downright gaudy. It's all up to personal preference, and the case is generally well designed in my view. Unfortunately, BTX appears to work well for cooling and noise but doesn't do much for compatibility.

    I can't say that I've had any experience with Delta Electronics beyond supporting a ton of PCs and laptops that used that brand (all Dell systems). Many PSUs failed after a few years, but that was in a warehouse environment where dust was a real problem. That they could last even two years is pretty good, and the failure rates were probably only on the order of 5% or so (compared to a motherboard failure rate of at least 15% after three years). However, I don't have any equipment to really test PSUs, so I can't speak from any standpoint other than personal experience when discussing what PSUs are good and which aren't.
  • Operandi - Friday, February 9, 2007 - link

    Dust will kill any PSU regardless of quality. Typically speaking Dell builds very reliable machines so the fact that Dell would source Delta is a testimate to their quality.
  • sprockkets - Saturday, February 10, 2007 - link

    They used to use Delta all the time, then, like HP and probably others, went to using HIPRO, and those die all the time.
  • Zebo - Friday, February 9, 2007 - link

    Dust kills, how so? How important is it to keep computer in general clean? Only time I ever clean is when I rebuild them- about every 6 months, not due to any kind of failure though. TIA
  • JarredWalton - Friday, February 9, 2007 - link

    Dust buildup on heatsinks reduces their ability to dissipate heat. I've seen a few GPUs where the fans literally melted because they got too hot! Besides that, dust can gum up the insides of the fans, causing the bearings or whatever else to stop working. I can't even guess at how many fans I've had fail over the years due to dust. So, if you live in a dusty environment, a good cleaning every 3 months probably isn't a bad idea. Most parts will last at least a year, even with neglect, but after that a lot of parts will start to fail if they aren't regularly cleaned.
  • ddogsoldier - Wednesday, November 4, 2015 - link

    so here it is nov,2015 . i have the fx530 q6600 do to my wife turning a nalgene botle full of water over own my asur pc witch was a lot newer and qiut fast with a nice turbo factory overclock when needed. had a friend who had 2 of these and new to the pc world i wanted to get one checked out with my pc guy to make sure it would run fps gmaes like warface , or planetside 2 and so on. one of the 2 was a d6600 and the other was a q6600 little did i know at the ime that one was quad and one was a duol core but i just had gotten lucky and grabbed the q6600. the pc set at my repair man shop for 4 months as i found the acer for a still didnt need the fx530 until the wife and her great spilledge of water . ya all 38 ounces . so now i have been running this q6600 for about 4 months with a
    MSI gtx560 ti twin frozer 2g/ddr5 .
    holly cow guys. with nothing over clocked i scoring on windows 7 score a
    7.1
    7.4
    7.4
    7.1
    5.9 <<hints hard drive
    i running 166 fps in warface and running faster than 89% of windows users are with a blazing boot time of 27seconds

    processor intel (R) Core (TM) 2 quad cpu Q6600 @ 2.40 GHz 2.39GHz
    ram 4.00 (3.50) usable
    hard drive 467gb with 416 gb free
    on a 64bit windows 7 system
    so i couldnt be any happier my self . all these years latter and this thing is pumping out power with no heat at all after hours and hours of hard core gaming for 8 to 12hr days '.
    i payed a total of zero dollars and no cents . i have a total of 40 and its in the video card off of craigslist and stolled it might as well say . cant find another for under 250 $ hope this is helpful to maybe a budget gamer that just might run up on one of these beast of a pc still holding its own

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