Just wondering if this kind of logic still applies for the Haswell on-module VRM?
This VRM is interesting because of the use of on-die transformers/inductors, and ultra-high phase count, even though it's power efficiency is poor compared to traditional regulator design.
Any views on whether this is good or bad for overclocking?
In terms of capability, it looks pretty over-engineered. The regulator will ship with 16 blocks of 20 phases each, with 3 blocks alone sufficient to run a quad core sandy-bridge xeon CPU stable in Linpack.
---
Meant to post this in the CPU forum. Dear mods, please move.
Done
-ViRGE
This VRM is interesting because of the use of on-die transformers/inductors, and ultra-high phase count, even though it's power efficiency is poor compared to traditional regulator design.
Any views on whether this is good or bad for overclocking?
In terms of capability, it looks pretty over-engineered. The regulator will ship with 16 blocks of 20 phases each, with 3 blocks alone sufficient to run a quad core sandy-bridge xeon CPU stable in Linpack.
---
Meant to post this in the CPU forum. Dear mods, please move.
Done
-ViRGE
Last edited by a moderator:
