Pentium dual core t4500 windows 10

Автор shtirlitz80, 05 декабря 2020, 22:38

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есть ноут HP 620, старый, но состояние идеальное, даже батарея живая 
установлены: Т4500, обычный HDD, 2*2 гб ddr3-1333
надо ли что-то улучшать, кроме замены HDD на SSD ?
задачи будут инет/видео/текст, понятно, что не для игрулек


Для инета, лично я однозначно бы добавил оперативной памяти. Проц можно конечно тоже поменять…. но для инета и как печатная машинка в принципе должно хватить!


памяти добавить однозначно, хотя бы 4+4, процессор сьемный? б/у процессор можно найти недорого думаю
ссд можно поставить основным, а если есть двд ром то вместо него оставить винчестер — будет больше места под те самые игрушки вдруг захочет кто играть )


Цитата: earl от 06 декабря 2020, 05:40памяти добавить однозначно, хотя бы 4+4

посмотрел в днс — около 1,4 тыр за планку 

Цитата: earl от 06 декабря 2020, 05:40процессор сьемный? б/у процессор можно найти недорого думаю

проц съемный, у китаев есть разные, но это же НР, хз что там в биосе накрутили, заведется ли
видео нашел, меняли на T5900, но в эту модель ноутов ставили 3 вида МП, на какой именно меняли не понятно

Цитата: earl от 06 декабря 2020, 05:40ссд можно поставить основным, а если есть двд ром то вместо него оставить винчестер — будет больше места под те самые игрушки вдруг захочет кто играть )

вариант кстати
а поиграть — разве что в веселую ферму 

воткну пока ssd да объявление создам по камню/памяти, может у кого завалялись, чтоб с примеркой можно было взять


Для инета да кино посмотреть и того что есть достаточно.
Если подтормаживает так скорее из-за загаженности операционки. радикальное средство- установка с нуля win или уход в linux   


Лайфхак: идем на сайт производителя, забиваем модель ноута, заходим в документацию, находим список поддерживаемых процессоров 



Естественно ссд. Память одну палку заменить на 4гб. Новую не надо, но скорее всего надо будет подбирать ее, т.к. они бывают к ней привередливы. А проц можно и помощнее, но надо смотреть охлад


Всё нормально 4 Гб памяти хватает, если по 10+ вкладок в браузере не открывать. Ну, если и больше откроешь, 2-3 секунды, пока подгрузится, не ломает.
Поменять жёсткий диск на SSD… ну, или, добавить, если возможно, как выше писали.


Стоит, или нет менять проц — поставить гаджет, показывающий его нагрузку, и сделать соответствующий вывод. Если, он, конструктивно, легко заменяем, на более мощный, — почему бы не заменить, не так, поди, и дорого, на Али замену найти. 


ссд сильно убыстрит этого старичка. не супер ракета конечно, но заметно быстрее будет ворочиться


менять все однозначно , проц ,памяти больше , ссд чтобы операционка стояла на нем


добавлено: 06 декабря 2020, 16:58


по деньгам правда выйдет прилично


А у меня асус с припаянной ОЗУ 1гб и пассивное охлаждение. В интернете сидеть было невозможно, поставил ссд и вполне отличная рабочая машинка получилась для современного интернета


добавлено: 06 декабря 2020, 22:35


Файл подкачки в ссд решает наверное)


мне в принципе ноут не нужен, я себе так совершенно мелкий нетбук обновил ,установил больше памяти и поставил ссдшник на 480 гб  , на шесть часов автономки это сила 


дошли руки вчера — поставил ссд, накатил вин10 — тупит, звука нет 
стал копать — оказалось НР как всегда, наставила нестандартного железа и прекратила поддержку. последняя ось — вин7*64
поставил ее — довольно бодро бегает все, но многозадачность сильно хромает, 1-2 процесса нормально, дальше подтормаживает
оценил производительность — проц и память по 5,8 баллов, ссд 7,8, видео аж 3,3
я так понимаю, что видео там еще не в процессор встраивалось?
учитывая это все — нет наверно смысла менять камень и оперативу, вкладываться дальше в откровенную некромантию 

не могу нигде найти, сколько вин7 баллов накидывала по производительности Т9300? по синтетике порой аж до 25 % лучше производительность, но учитывая от чего отталкиваемся — тоже не фонтан
на авито видел T7500 и T8100, так они с Т4500 сопоставимы по производительности

пока мысль — оставить как есть, настроив на производительность …


ssd+оставить все как есть. Разница в производительности при замене cpu будет минимальна и почти бессмысленна…


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  • #1

My laptop’s CPU is Legacy Intel Pentium Dual-Core T4400
however, at Intel’s site the table shows that this series of processors does not support Windows 10
now may I know what’s the cause that I processor won’t support windows 10??
I’ve read many other sites claiming its completely normal to run windows 10 on any dual core processor that has 2.0+ GHz clock and decent amount of RAM (>3GB)

lastly, if I install windows 10, will it work?
CPU T4400
integrated graphics
4GB ram ddr2



Jun 12, 2005


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  • #2

My laptop’s CPU is Legacy Intel Pentium Dual-Core T4400
however, at Intel’s site the table shows that this series of processors does not support Windows 10
now may I know what’s the cause that I processor won’t support windows 10??
I’ve read many other sites claiming its completely normal to run windows 10 on any dual core processor that has 2.0+ GHz clock and decent amount of RAM (>3GB)

lastly, if I install windows 10, will it work?
CPU T4400
integrated graphics
4GB ram ddr2

Try it and post back the results.
It should work, although somewhat slowly.



May 6, 2012


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  • #3

Your problem will not be your CPU itself, but the integrated graphics. All of the integrated IGPs possible for C2D* systems are effectively obsolete. That’s not to say they will not work, but the end result will not be good.

Windows 10 really require a DirectX 11-capable GPU to run well. I’d recommend not installing Win10 on anything pre-Ivy Bridge. That’s the Core 3000-series, along with certain Pentium/Celeron models.

*Which your Pentium shares silicon with.

  • #4

i have installed windows 10 on lots of c2d machines, no problems at all. from using them, cant tell a difference in speed between 10 and 7


  • #5

i have installed windows 10 on lots of c2d machines, no problems at all. from using them, cant tell a difference in speed between 10 and 7

I have Windows 10 installed on two AMD Phenom 720’s with integrated motherboard graphics that are 10 plus year old platforms. The integrated graphics works fine for regular office types of applications, and for web browsing.

I have two Intel platforms with integrated graphics that are also older on Windows 10. An i5 3470, and a i3 4150. The i3 4150 has much better graphics performance than the i5. It is noticeable on watching high definition videos on YouTube.

All in all, Windows 10 has been great on these very old systems with an SSD, and at least 8 GB of RAM.

I would say it is worth trying on the older core 2 system.



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  • #6

FWIW I updated an old dual core laptop and was able to find cheap RAM which I upgraded before moving to 10. I think they cost $12-$13 per 4GB sticks. I installed 8GB which was way better than the 3GB included from the factory. I also already had an SSD installed which I’m sure helps.



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  • #7

I have Windows 10 installed on two AMD Phenom 720’s with integrated motherboard graphics that are 10 plus year old platforms. The integrated graphics works fine for regular office types of applications, and for web browsing.

I have two Intel platforms with integrated graphics that are also older on Windows 10. An i5 3470, and a i3 4150. The i3 4150 has much better graphics performance than the i5. It is noticeable on watching high definition videos on YouTube.

All in all, Windows 10 has been great on these very old systems with an SSD, and at least 8 GB of RAM.

I would say it is worth trying on the older core 2 system.

The thing is, those aren’t actually that old a system. Ivy Bridge and Haswell are still (kind of) recent, in that they are minimally still supported (I think?) with Win10 Intel iGPU drivers.

The Phenom II 720’s mobo iGPUs are HD4200 or somesuch, on a 780G mobo, and those are also at the very least minimally-supported.

Anything Intel iGPU Sandy Bridge or older, is not really that supported in Win10, and a Core2-era iGPU may require using the «MS Basic Display Adapter», which is VERY basic, and AFAIK, does not support any sort of GPU-level acceleration for video files, and CPUs of that era don’t have much grunt for more than 360P videos, if that, when streamed over the internet. (If their ‘B’ or ‘G’ wifi can even handle that.)

Edit: That said, it will probably function (compute, disk, and video, will boot), but the results may not be satisfactory.



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  • #8

The thing is, those aren’t actually that old a system. Ivy Bridge and Haswell are still (kind of) recent, in that they are minimally still supported (I think?) with Win10 Intel iGPU drivers.

Everything considered they’re quite well supported. Latest drivers are from January, the whole Intel GPU security debacle forced them to update drivers from the 3rd gen and up.

I’m not sure if the updated drivers have a performance impact though. If that’s even relevant. The difference in 3D performance between ultra slow and slideshow isn’t going to make much difference.

Anything Intel iGPU Sandy Bridge or older, is not really that supported in Win10, and a Core2-era iGPU may require using the «MS Basic Display Adapter», which is VERY basic, and AFAIK, does not support any sort of GPU-level acceleration for video files, and CPUs of that era don’t have much grunt for more than 360P videos, if that, when streamed over the internet. (If their ‘B’ or ‘G’ wifi can even handle that.)

This^^

C2D-era IGPs will put a picture on the monitor, and that’s about it. For office type applications I doubt no one would notice, but browsing the web will be a bad experience if everything has to be handled in software.

…and the regular Windows maintenance just murder older 2.5″ 5400RPM HDDs. Which this laptop very likely has. Been there, and been sorely tempted to throw said laptop out the Window(s). (Pun intended)



Aug 25, 2001


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  • #9

…and the regular Windows maintenance just murder older 2.5″ 5400RPM HDDs. Which this laptop very likely has. Been there, and been sorely tempted to throw said laptop out the Window(s). (Pun intended)

^^^ and This.


  • #10

okay this turned out to be a nice discussion, appreciate your replies
but, in the end:
for regular use like MS office, old Autocad like Autocad 2013 (should work fine based on system requirements on AutoDesk website, surfing web (videos running fine as I tried) will it suffice with Windows 10 64-bit? work smoothly?

if not, would you suggest upgrading to windows 8 or 8.1 64-bit or windows 10 32-bit?

I could’ve gone 8GB but maximum RAM supported for this chipset is 4GB (yeah very old stuff), only thing to do is install an SSD but it have SATA II I guess not SATA III (as PC wizard 2015 says) will that be a problem?



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  • #11

Just buy a new laptop with Windows 10. Don’t waste your time trying to revive the old laptop. Intel is not even providing graphics driver for Windows 8.x

Any windows 10 graphics drivers for the Intel Pentium T4400?

I currently own a Intel Pentium T4400 Notebook laptop. I have just recently installed Windows 10 but I cant get the proper graphics drivers for it. I currently have http://www.intel.com/p/en_US/support/highlights/graphics/4m Mobile Intel® 4 Series Express Chipset Family Witch can’t support…



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  • #12

for regular use like MS office, old Autocad like Autocad 2013 (should work fine based on system requirements on AutoDesk website, surfing web (videos running fine as I tried) will it suffice with Windows 10 64-bit? work smoothly?

You’ll have to try it. If you find it acceptable, fine. I doubt it will be smooth though.

However, I don’t think it’s worth the time (or money) you put in. You’d be much better of with even the cheapest laptop which features Windows 10. Just make sure you either get one which uses either an SSD or eMMC in a pinch. HDDs are dead for boot drives.

For basic usage, even my own Celeron N3350 craptop is perfectly useable.

if not, would you suggest upgrading to windows 8 or 8.1 64-bit or windows 10 32-bit?

If you absolutely cannot get a new laptop, I’d advise some lightweight flavour of Linux, if you have to use the internet. Linux has much better support for older hardware, if it’s not too exotic.

Running a 32bit version of Windows 10 should only be done in very specific circumstances. Where you know exactly what you’re getting into.

If you can use the internet from another PC, staying with 7 is perfectly acceptable.

RLGL

Platinum Member



Jan 8, 2013


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  • #13

Autocad 2013 is 32 or 64 bit. Makes a difference when installing windows version.



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  • #15

You’ll have to try it. If you find it acceptable, fine. I doubt it will be smooth though.

However, I don’t think it’s worth the time (or money) you put in. You’d be much better of with even the cheapest laptop which features Windows 10. Just make sure you either get one which uses either an SSD or eMMC in a pinch. HDDs are dead for boot drives.

For basic usage, even my own Celeron N3350 craptop is perfectly useable.

If you absolutely cannot get a new laptop, I’d advise some lightweight flavour of Linux, if you have to use the internet. Linux has much better support for older hardware, if it’s not too exotic.

Running a 32bit version of Windows 10 should only be done in very specific circumstances. Where you know exactly what you’re getting into.

If you can use the internet from another PC, staying with 7 is perfectly acceptable.

I acknowledge what you’re saying, if I had the money to buy a new laptop I certainly would, I know there are cheap laptops but most of them if not all are of Intel U CPUs or other power-saving performance murdering stuff, which is what I don’t want to waste money on because in maximum 2 years it’ll be much like garbage (sorry for that word)

if I want to buy a new laptop I make sure to buy at least an Intel 8th gen i5 or i7 H,HQ,MQ or these performance favouring stuff with dedicated good GPU of course, it’s just not worth wasting money on power-saving CPUs and low end or integrated graphics

finally, if windows 10 was a no no, then I’d just stay with this «extinct» laptop =)) until God facilitate livelihood



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  • #16

Walmart Laptop. It’s $279 now though.

Forget about getting dedicated GPU if you can’t even afford a cheap new laptop

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  • #17

Walmart Laptop. It’s $279 now though.

Forget about getting dedicated GPU if you can’t even afford a cheap new laptop

what is this garbage? 4gb ram? who the hell is MOTILE anyway?
anyways, I didn’t say I can’t afford a cheap new laptop, in fact, thanks God, I can
BUT it’s a waste of money, why would you get something with capabilities only slightly better than a damn 10+ years old laptop, just forget about that laptop

anyway, right now, I can spare 600$ for a laptop but should not have a power consumption saving stuff like Intel U or Y or T or that sort of stuff or without dedicated GPU

I say 8th gen Intel i5-8400B and 1050Ti would be decent or anything above (if that fits )



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  • #18

You can easily buy a 16GB RAM to replace that 4GB module any time.

If you can spare $600, why trying to revive that T4400 CPU with DDR2 laptop in the first place? 🙄 You were giving people the impression that you don’t even have the money to buy a cheap new laptop.

$600 makes your choice much easier.

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  • #19

You can easily buy a 16GB RAM to replace that 4GB module any time.

If you can spare $600, why trying to revive that T4400 CPU with DDR2 laptop in the first place? 🙄 You were giving people the impression that you don’t even have the money to buy a cheap new laptop.

$600 makes your choice much easier.

What’s this company reputation? Previous user experiences, support, reliability etc all this have to be checked before buying

I didn’t intend to give that impression, I was just seeking out maximum possibilities (if there’s any) so that if the thing fits maybe it can give me a time boost to spare more $$ for a new laptop, sure, its basic information that you can’t get what you desire in 10+ years old machine

Anyway thanks for the link, gonna review it and see



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  • #20

I acknowledge what you’re saying, if I had the money to buy a new laptop I certainly would, I know there are cheap laptops but most of them if not all are of Intel U CPUs or other power-saving performance murdering stuff, which is what I don’t want to waste money on because in maximum 2 years it’ll be much like garbage (sorry for that word)

I think you’ll find those performance murdering power saving new chips are significantly faster then any C2D/Q. That’s what 11 years worth of improvements from Penryn do. Don’t mistake a 15W TDP with «slow». Especially when coupled with an NVMe SSD.

Even the lowest-end Gemini Lake parts are already on par with C2D and C2Qs for the 4 core versions. In a 10W envelope.

Also, don’t mistake modern IGPs with Intel’s old GMA ones. The HD500/(U)HD600 series are quite capable for desktop work, since they have hardware acceleration for everything. Even simple JPEG decoding is done in hardware.


  • #21

I think you’ll find those performance murdering power saving new chips are significantly faster then any C2D/Q. That’s what 11 years worth of improvements from Penryn do. Don’t mistake a 15W TDP with «slow». Especially when coupled with an NVMe SSD.

Even the lowest-end Gemini Lake parts are already on par with C2D and C2Qs for the 4 core versions. In a 10W envelope.

Also, don’t mistake modern IGPs with Intel’s old GMA ones. The HD500/(U)HD600 series are quite capable for desktop work, since they have hardware acceleration for everything. Even simple JPEG decoding is done in hardware.

yeah sure I know what you’re saying, of course Core 2 series is like an ‘extinct’ series, tbh even old i3s and i5s from Intel first generation are considered useless now, anything dual core will not suffice any more, quad core is the minimum standard right now and in the next few years they’ll probably be less and less efficient

so if I’m investing in some hardware, I advise myself to get a 6-core CPU

new integrated GPUs may be good but and will never be as good as a mid


  • #22

First replace the HD with SSD.

Be aware that HDD might be PATA, not SATA. My Dell laptop from around 2006 was PATA. A quick check with CrystalDisk will tell you what you have.

Question: I’m currently installing W10 on my old i5 2500K (Sandy Bridge, for those of you who have forgotten about the trusty old 2500K… ) and it seems to be working well enough. It will eventually go into my HTPC, replacing an i3 2100… but it will have a GTX950 as well, does this negate the video issues with older chips? I’ve not tried to stream anything on it just yet, but I wasn’t aware until I saw this thread that there was any issues…



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  • #23

but it will have a GTX950 as well, does this negate the video issues with older chips?

Pretty-much, yes.



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  • #24

yeah sure I know what you’re saying, of course Core 2 series is like an ‘extinct’ series, tbh even old i3s and i5s from Intel first generation are considered useless now, anything dual core will not suffice any more, quad core is the minimum standard right now and in the next few years they’ll probably be less and less efficient

I think you’re missing the point. Any Nehalem and later CPU is perfectly adequate for office work. It’s the old IGPs that that are useless.

If you pair a C2D with something like a GT710 (or perhaps even GT1030), that still has driver support, you have a perfectly acceptable system.

Trouble is you can’t upgrade an IGP in a laptop, so the IGP renders the whole laptop unusable.

new integrated GPUs may be good but and will never be as good as a mid

An integrated Vega11 is already a good deal faster then most older midrange cards. The Ryzen 4000 series should be even better. If you mean within the same generation of hardware, certainly.

However, none of that matters for desktop work. Even AutoCAD will run happily on a modern IGP, barring driver issues.

Question: I’m currently installing W10 on my old i5 2500K (Sandy Bridge, for those of you who have forgotten about the trusty old 2500K… ) and it seems to be working well enough. It will eventually go into my HTPC, replacing an i3 2100… but it will have a GTX950 as well, does this negate the video issues with older chips?

Completely. See first paragraph above.

A 2500K + GTX950 makes for a fine HTPC IMHO.

DAPUNISHER

Super Moderator CPU Forum Mod and Elite Member



Aug 22, 2001


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  • #25

The thing is, those aren’t actually that old a system. Ivy Bridge and Haswell are still (kind of) recent, in that they are minimally still supported (I think?) with Win10 Intel iGPU drivers.

The Phenom II 720’s mobo iGPUs are HD4200 or somesuch, on a 780G mobo, and those are also at the very least minimally-supported.

Anything Intel iGPU Sandy Bridge or older, is not really that supported in Win10, and a Core2-era iGPU may require using the «MS Basic Display Adapter», which is VERY basic, and AFAIK, does not support any sort of GPU-level acceleration for video files, and CPUs of that era don’t have much grunt for more than 360P videos, if that, when streamed over the internet. (If their ‘B’ or ‘G’ wifi can even handle that.)

Edit: That said, it will probably function (compute, disk, and video, will boot), but the results may not be satisfactory.

Win 10 support is not necessary my friend. At least not with an 11yr old GeForce 7025/nForce 630a chipset using the IGP. Of course it is not going to decode VP9, AV1, or such, but the Phenom II 960T @ 4GHz that I just tried with it, can handle Youtube 1080p60 itself. Barely, but it can do it, drops about 15-20 percent of the frames but the video is still very watchable. 720p or 768p? is a better option for playback on an old laptop. I think the dual core could handle decoding that res well enough.

Back to my point: I picked legacy win7 64bit drivers for the Asus M2N68-AM SE2 and win 10 pro 1909 installed them like they were native. Every legacy game and software I have tried on this old PC works automatically in 1909 so far. I do not even have to compatibility troubleshoot anything. I am posting from the IGP setup via VGA 1080@60 and it is a bit blurry on a 1440p monitor. And for the lulz I fired up GTA: San Andreas and it played it@720p 20fps average. Had to turn the ceiling fan on high, my ir temp gun read 67c for the heatsink on the MCP68SE after only a couple of minutes of game play. That brought temps down to 54c max so far. I added VRM cooling by taking the VRM heatsink from a dead MSI z87 G45 Gaming, so they are handling the OC and gaming no problem.

Based on my experience, someone should be able to pick old win 7 64bit drivers and 1909 will make them work.

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Процессор Pentium Dual Core T4500 был выпущен компанией Intel, дата выпуска: 10 January 2009. Процессор предназначен для mobile-компьютеров и построен на архитектуре Penryn.

Процессор заблокирован для оверклокинга. Общее количество ядер — 2, потоков — 2. Максимальная тактовая частота процессора — 2.3 GHz. Технологический процесс — 45 nm. Размер кэша: L1 — 128 KB, L2 — 1024 KB.

Поддерживаемый тип сокета: PGA478. Энергопотребление (TDP): 35 Watt.

Бенчмарки

PassMark
Single thread mark
PassMark
CPU mark
Geekbench 4
Single Core
Geekbench 4
Multi-Core
CompuBench 1.5 Desktop
Face Detection
CompuBench 1.5 Desktop
Ocean Surface Simulation
CompuBench 1.5 Desktop
T-Rex
CompuBench 1.5 Desktop
Video Composition
CompuBench 1.5 Desktop
Bitcoin Mining
Название Значение
PassMark — Single thread mark 899
PassMark — CPU mark 834
Geekbench 4 — Single Core 272
Geekbench 4 — Multi-Core 474
CompuBench 1.5 Desktop — Face Detection 0.226 mPixels/s
CompuBench 1.5 Desktop — Ocean Surface Simulation 7.743 Frames/s
CompuBench 1.5 Desktop — T-Rex 0.058 Frames/s
CompuBench 1.5 Desktop — Video Composition 0.387 Frames/s
CompuBench 1.5 Desktop — Bitcoin Mining 1.639 mHash/s

Характеристики

Общая информация

Название архитектуры Penryn
Дата выпуска 10 January 2009
Место в рейтинге 3238
Processor Number T4500
Серия Legacy Intel® Pentium® Processor
Status Discontinued
Применимость Mobile

Производительность

Поддержка 64 bit
Base frequency 2.30 GHz
Bus Speed 800 MHz FSB
Площадь кристалла 107 mm2
Системная шина (FSB) 800 MHz
Кэш 1-го уровня 128 KB
Кэш 2-го уровня 1024 KB
Технологический процесс 45 nm
Максимальная частота 2.3 GHz
Количество ядер 2
Количество потоков 2
Количество транзисторов 410 million

Совместимость

Low Halogen Options Available
Поддерживаемые сокеты PGA478
Энергопотребление (TDP) 35 Watt

Безопасность и надежность

Execute Disable Bit (EDB)
Технология Intel® Trusted Execution (TXT)

Технологии

Технология Enhanced Intel SpeedStep®
Intel 64
Технология Intel® Turbo Boost
Thermal Monitoring

Виртуализация

Intel® Virtualization Technology (VT-x)

Last updated:

Pentium Dual-Core T4500 is a mobile processor from Intel released on 1 January 2010, and it is in end-of-life production status now. It belongs to Pentium Dual-Core family and has a Penryn architecture. This processor is built on Intel Socket P, and uses unknown PCI express connection. 45 nm process is used in production.

Processor has 2 cores and 2 threads, with the base frequency of 2.3 GHz. It has DDR3 memory support. As for the cache, it supports L1 64K and L2 1MB.

Learn more about Intel Pentium Dual-Core T4500:

  • Specifications
  • Drivers
  • Benchmark & Performance
  • Gaming

Specifications

Vertical Segment
Mobile
Release date
1 January 2010
Production status
End-of-life
Generation
Pentium Dual-Core
Codename
Penryn
Socket
Intel Socket P
Total Cores
2
Total Threads
2
Frequency
2.3 GHz
Turbo clock
N/A
Cache L1
64K
Cache L2
1MB
TDP
35 W

Physical Specifications

Socket
Intel Socket P
Foundry
Intel
Process size
45 nm
Transistors
410 million
Die size
107 mm²
Package

Performance

Frequency
2.3 GHz
Turbo clock
N/A
Base clock
800 MHz
Multiplier
11.5x
Multiplier unlocked
No
Voltage
1.15 V
TDP
35 W

Architecture Details

Vertical Segment
Mobile
Production status
End-of-life
Release date
1 January 2010
Codename
Penryn

Cores

Total Cores
2
Total Threads
2
SMP # CPUs
1
Integrated graphics
N/A

Cache

Features & Technologies

  • MMX
  • SSE
  • SSE2
  • SSE3
  • SSSE3
  • EIST
  • Intel 64
  • XD bit

Drivers

Looking for Pentium Dual-Core T4500 driver download? We recommend Driver Booster program that can find, install, and keep up to date all drivers on Windows 10, 8.1, and 7 in one click!

FREE Drivers Download

Benchmark & Performance

PassMark

Performance Comparing to Similar Processors

  • Intel Pentium Dual-Core T4500

    625

Compare

Gaming

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