Lol, really? What about a tri-core 2.4ghz compared to a daul core 64 x2 2.7?
And yes, the specs in-sig are my pc.
Hey bro, i upgraded from a 5200+ to a 8750 BE, and i havent regretted it yet, was a great upgrade. I overclocked this thing just by changing the multi. to 2.7ghz no voltage change(1.24v)...
Ill give you some examples.
In crysis, i gained about 5fps, but not only the fps but it ran smoother, no jitters while playing, or FPS spikes i think they call em.
Video encoding, the main reason i upgraded, 30minute anime clip, with my 5200+ it took roughly 7 to 8 min. now it takes 4-5, great improvement.
(DVIX 1200kbps 480/272) Cowon s9 FTW
The extra core, its nice, some things i don't notice a difference, in fact most things i don't but when ever i game, or video transcode. Theres quite a difference...
I bought mine from newegg about 3 weeks ago, for about 70 bucks i think it was, it was the oem version, which was what i wanted, that amd stock fan is great:good:
Anyway i would recommend to the 8750 B.E. to you. You could overclock that thing to 3.0ghz with a 1.3v core.Great cpu.
But on the other side, i would wait, i mean, you have a brand new mobo, why not wait a month, and buy a phenom 2 thats a quad and can clock quite a bit higher, and more cache.
You could get a realy nice quad phenom 2 for 110$ bucks.
EDIT:
heres your mobo cpu support...
http://www.ecs.com.tw/ECSWebSite/Support/CPU_Support_Model.aspx?detailid=866&MenuID=69&LanID=0
Just want to say, you are going to regret getting a P1, when your mobo supports the P2's
Heres some good, budget cpus.
http://www.newegg.com/Product/Product.aspx?Item=N82E16819103706
or
http://www.newegg.com/Product/Product.aspx?Item=N82E16819103688
That dual core would be a nice cheap budget, you could that that thing to 3.8ghz w/ aftermarket cooler.