Excellent work!
any still available? cost?
The firmware would work for either of those CPU's, so go with the one that makes the most sense of cost/performance to you (usage pattern).I was about to buy a 2.26 and upgrade it with either W5580's or W5590's, but now it seems like W5580's make more sense. How do you get ahold of Tutor by the way? I have some questions for him.
I was about to buy a 2.26 and upgrade it with either W5580's or W5590's, but now it seems like W5580's make more sense. How do you get ahold of Tutor by the way? I have some questions for him.
I looked under Tutor's contact info and I could not see anything that I could click on......
I thought the W5590 does NOT work in the Mac Pro 2009? Has anyone done it yet and had it work? What about Turbo?
Good point. I hadn't even thought about this. I seem to only remember that's an issue with the Market Place. 😱 😛There's probably a post count limit before you can PM, it's probably like 10 or something
OK I see that he got it done, can't quite understand about the thermal pads and cutting connectors, can someone elaborate?No turbo, but you're posting in the thread of the guy that did the 5590 upgrade
EDIT:
There's probably a post count limit before you can PM, it's probably like 10 or something
IIRC, this should have to do with the headroom available (clocks upper limit in the design). So if you used the W5590, though there's no Turbo, it's going to operate all cores at it's limit, which is still higher than what all cores can run at on the W5580.OK I see that he got it done, can't quite understand about the thermal pads and cutting connectors, can someone elaborate?
OK I see that he got it done, can't quite understand about the thermal pads and cutting connectors, can someone elaborate?
It is not so difficult to understand. There are pictures in the thread which shows the thermal pads on the rim of the heat sink. Apple CPUs have no heat spreaders but use the naked die for contact with the heat sink. The additional heat spreader on the standard CPU adds 1,8 mm to the heigth of the CPU. This means the heat sink doesn't make contact with the voltage regulators on the CPU/RAM tray. If you want to keep them cooled you have to add a bit of thermal padding.
The connector issue is similar. In the original design the contacts are automatically snapped in due to sufficient insertion stroke. The added height of the IHS prevents the connector to snap home. You have to make it fit or the CPUs will not start up. The connector closes the thermocouple and the internal heat sink fan wires. Obvious, that the CPUs need protection if the fans don't run. The male and female parts of the connectors are fitted to the CPU/RAM tray and the heat sink. For the CPUs with heat spreaders you have to disassemble the heat sink side connector and manually connect it. Cutting the plastic clips from the connector will help the thing to slide into position when you bolt the heat sink down without blocking the final assembly.
I am wondering why the dual W5570 upgrade article on Anadtech:
http://www.anandtech.com/mac/showdoc.aspx?i=3597&p=11
makes no mention of needing to modifying the black connectors at the end of the heat sinks (or the necessity for thermal pads to close the gap on one side of the heat sinks) to work with stock procs featuring an IHS.
Am I missing something obvious? Does anyone have an explanation on how they apparently avoided this necessity?😕
they were $650 a piece, the W5590's were $1150 a piece. I decided to try the 5580 first, and if I can do the upgrade successfully I'll probably go ahead and buy the W5590's. I think perhaps I might start selling the upgrades as a working unit. We've been selling tons of Clovertown Mac Pros already.
One question about RAID cards, did anyone ever finally get a RAID card working with 10.6? We tried three different RocketRAIDs and none of them worked, and we also tried an ATTO card; all right after the release of 10.6. No joy on any of them without kernel panics.
I bought my thermal pads and the procs, I'm hoping I can figure out how to trim the cables, or whatever was said on here.
I'm running the Areca 1210 in boot mode with two 80 GB Intel 2nd Gen SSDs in Raid0 and another 160 GB Intel 2nd Gen on the second ODD Sata port for Vista64. My 4 HDD ports are all reserved for mass data storage.
What do you mean by "boot mode" is that a special setting or something? Do you think the Intel 80GB SSD's are the best bang for the buck? I get dealer pricing on OCZ and Intel, just not sure which to get. We have installed the 80GB SSD in 2007 Mac Pros running on the normal bus and it works fine.....
So back to the 10.6 RAID Card issue...... no kernel panics or crashes?
ATTO just sent me a R30F card to eval, but I also have a 4320 RR here. What about the Areca 1210 card, how much are they? I've never heard of that company until recently.
With regards to this site, are you saying I have to make 10 posts before I can email anyone?
I just ment that I'm booting OS X from the RAID0. I do think the Intels are superior, particularly for RAID. No crashes or kernel panics, no.
I was searching for a RAID card booting OS X and Windows in RAID0 but never found one. I had some hope for the 1210 but had to abandon my search as hopeless. So now I just boot OS X in dual SSD RAID0 from the card and Windows from the single SSD off the 2nd ODD SATA port.