Today we’re looking at a system from a now defunct (I think) OEM, eMachines. The model number is ET1331, which according to cnet.com is manuifactured by Acer. I don’t know if that’s true I just thought it was interesting.
Here’s the standard specs on the day you bought it back in the day:
Processor: AMD
Athlon(tm) II X2 235e 2.7 GHz
RAM: 6.00 GB DDR2 800
Chipset:
NForce 430 MCP61
Graphics: GeForce 6150SE
Hard Drive: 750
GB SA TA 3.0 Gbps
OS: Windows 7 Ultimate 64-bit
I’ll go over the upgrades we make later, but this is where we’re starting.
From my first
IBM Aptiva to my current gaming PC, I’ve always loved the world of
PC gaming, it’s nothing like console gaming in my opinion. It’s
always been more of a wild west, an intellectuals refuge, the fringes
found their friends here, and we all played Counterstrike 1.6.
(This is just copy-pasted from my script for the video on this I made, I’m that lazy, but it sounds better as a dry joke as opposed to just reading it and thinking I’m serious.. or as reddit would say /s)
But for at least 5 years leading up to 2009 I was without a PC, I had packed up everything I owned, fell in love with a girl, and moved to a different part of the world. Sure I had a playstation 3 and the complete box set of The Venture brothers, but something was missing.
Then, as all things good, my adventure in a far off land came to an end, and I had to come back home with my tail between my legs. But there is always a silver lining on clouds like these, and that silver lining was Emachine.
One day, as I was sulking around my cousins aparment while they went to college, I got a phone call, it was my brother. And he was excited. “Jake he said (my name is jake by the way) Jake he said, Remember counterstrike? We should all buy computers, and play that again!” and so that’s what we all did., me my brother and at least 3 or 4 of my cousins all invested in building gaming computers, and I used the 2009 Wal-mart Emachine special you see before you today. Sure I don’t have it in a case, but that’s because there is just no way to contain the raw horsepower this machine exudes as you power it up and strap in for the ride of your life.
Or that’s how it felt in 2009.
The memory that stands out the most for me from these times is skyrim, though that was some years later, it was played on this very system. Though I loved morrowind for its breadth and scale, and oblivion for its story, Skyrim was just beautiful to look at,and for the first time I could turn my settings all the way up.
Anyway on to the specs.
The motherboard we have today is an AM2+ platform, holding 8gb of 666mhz (praise satin rugs) DDR2 ram the model number is MCP 61 PM-GM revision 2.2. if you’re going out buying old motherboards like this, always look out for bulging or leaky caps.
The CPU is the athlon x2 235e with its 2 core 2 threads clocked at 2.7 ghz, with a tdp of just 45 watts, which makes this thing a breeze to cool, especially since the BIOS is locked down. Though I’ve been doing some research and we may be able to unlock these suckers, it will have to wait for another episode.
The GPU’s are, like I mentioned earlier the GTX 460, we’ll be using the 1gb 256bit model today, and the 8gb rx 580 from gigabyte. We’ll keep the rx 580 stock, but this gtx 460 is overclockable as hell, so we’re gonna have to have some fun with this later down the line.
I’ll be doing another video with these 2 cards where I go over them in more detail, I’ll include a link down below if its available.
For our benchmarks today we’re going to look at a few older games, and a few newer games though I was unable to find my copy of skyrim, I dont own it on steam, I have it on DVD, but we’ll fix that here soon I promise… anyway we’re going to look at some older stuff and some newer stuff just to show you what this thing is capable of.
First up we have Furmark, which is a purely GPU bound benchmark if there ever was one, and will give us context for the rest of the benchmarks that we’re looking at today.

Next we’ll look at Tomb Raider, which is playable and runs in the 50fps average range, this benchmark is not indicative of in game performance at all.
We’re in a situation where the cpu is hitting 100 percent, causing the GPU to become starved for frames to execute. This is never not going to be a problem with 2 core, 2 thread systems here on forward unless you want to move away from windows 10.

on a side note, if you’d like to see how much performance we’re losing between windows 7 and 10 leave a comment and we will take a dive into what 2 cores can do in each os.
Now we’ll move onto GTA5 and this game was unplayable no matter what settings I used. This is another example of CPU bottleneck, and in this instance, no matter what settings I used, and I mean no matter which ones I used, high low, medium any… the CPU is such a bottleneck that performance stayed the sames, so at least its consistent.
I couldn’t get the Benchmark to finish. I think this would manifest as a VRAM shortage if we had a 4 core system, but this 2 core system just struggles, plain and simple.

We’ll dig deeper into this 2 core phenomenon with an intel core 2 duo I own, which Is probably twice as fast as this thing. I’m interested to see how it will perform in gta5
On to Resident evil 6 and I feel like I’m repeating myself here, but this is a game benchmark that seems to run quite well, well enough anyway that if you wanted to play resident evil 6 with this system configuration, you might be able to get away with it.

Now here’s my favorite benchmark, maybe because its the funnest to watch… but World of tanks canned benchmark is another example of a newer title that runs just fine with a cpu from 2009, I haven’t tried actual gameplay because I didnt think of it.. yeah… anyway

up next we have another title thats playable on this old of a configuration, and that’s rocket league, just like elsewhere, we can see that the bottleneck is the cpu and if you want any gains, you’ll have to look into upgrading or overclocking.

A couple things I’d like to mention, 1 is that I think overclocking on this motherboard is possible, I’ve seen a guide online on how to do it, the only problem is I’m having trouble getting the software to run inside of windows 10 natively so I think we’ll have to try and get windows xp up and running on my old Pentium 4 machine, use that to create the boot media to flash the BIOS, and go from there.
Or maybe not, I’ll try and get it to work with windows 10, and it seemed to work once, but then when I accidentally formatted my drive I couldn’t get it to work again.
And number 2, is that if overclocking isn’t a possibility on a locked motherboard like this, there is always upgrades, and upgrades are cheap for stuff like this. The only problem is again, the BIOS. With a motherboard manufacturing these parts for OEM’s, chances are the bioses had a limited range of CPU support, but I’ve got a athlon x4 which will most likely work, an x6 which who fucking knows, and a phenom, which I’m almost positive will not work on this motherboard,but we’ll have fun trying.
Until then I think what we’ll do is take these same 2 graphics cards and put them into a modern 6 core 12 thread system to put the bottleneck on the GPU, at least for the 460, and show just how much of a performance differential is occurring between a 2012 build and a 2018 build.
(edit here: I ended up selling this system for a bit of a profit for a video about reselling old systems for profit, I’ll post an article about it as well, but I can’t do the test on the 460 anymore because I don’t own it. I’ll eventually buy a new one)











