by Papafox » Wed Nov 19, 2008 1:33 am
Two weeks ago I built a computer with a Q9550 CPU, 4GB of DDR2 ram, and Vista Premium 64. I was blown away by the smoothness improvement in certain missions such as the Reno Air Races and F-18 carrier ops compared to a previous 32-bit operating system, 2GB of memory and a 9450 CPU. You'll find that Vista 64 and 4GB or ram really is fantastic when paired with a fast cpu. Which component made the difference, though?
Last week I brought my Vista 32 Q6600 machine from 2GB to 4GB or DDR2 and saw a nice improvement with the missions mentioned above. Obviously the jump to 4GB DDR2 helped, but I really think the combination of 64-bit and 4GB of DDR2 is the way to go.
An upgrade to Vista 64 without bringing the ram up to 4GB would be a waste, and I wouldn't do it.
The biggest improvement in your MSFS X experience would come from running a faster processor, preferably a quad-core. If you already have a good case and power supply, the move is not that expensive, provided that your case and power supply are not proprietary (HP, Compaq, etc.) For $120 you can buy an ASus P5Q Pro motherboard, for as low as $78 you can get 4GB of fairly-fast DDR2 ram, and an intel quad-core will cost between $189 and $319. The Nehalem chips are now released, but those computers are quite a bit more expensive at the moment. Your graphics card is good, but there's lots of room for improvement with your CPU. Maybe it makes sense to take that plunge.
If you're an overclocker, spend $60 on a good cpu fan and enjoy the huge improvement. If you're not an overclocker, then a $319 Q9550 would still make you happy at stock speed.