I started the race for our team in SO4R in GTAL 2010, starting about midpack and don't recall any slowdowns. I will test again this evening though just to be sure (and also watch from last on the grid).
The Q6600 is quite literally two E6600 cores on the same die. The Q6600 has 2x4MB of L2 cache but each core can only access its associated 4MB, so performance there will be exactly the same as an E6600 under ideal conditions. I think the Q6600 will have a slight advantage of background tasks are being computed on one of the cores not sharing the 4MB with the LFS core, but that's it.
That review by Eza is really nice, and does look like I am mistaken in theory. In most of his tests (from 2.5 year old computers) the minimum fps was about ~55 (low end) and 70-80fps (high end, of 2.5 year old computers). Hardly any need for multithreading there.
The Q6600 is quite literally two E6600 cores on the same die. The Q6600 has 2x4MB of L2 cache but each core can only access its associated 4MB, so performance there will be exactly the same as an E6600 under ideal conditions. I think the Q6600 will have a slight advantage of background tasks are being computed on one of the cores not sharing the 4MB with the LFS core, but that's it.
That review by Eza is really nice, and does look like I am mistaken in theory. In most of his tests (from 2.5 year old computers) the minimum fps was about ~55 (low end) and 70-80fps (high end, of 2.5 year old computers). Hardly any need for multithreading there.