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320 power phases should be enough for anybody

Mark R

Diamond Member
Oct 9, 1999
8,513
16
81
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.

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Meant to post this in the CPU forum. Dear mods, please move.

Done
-ViRGE
 
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Ayah

Platinum Member
Jan 1, 2006
2,512
1
81
Depends on the current carrying capacity. They could be 0.5A phases (hopefully not likely).
 

ViRGE

Elite Member, Moderator Emeritus
Oct 9, 1999
31,516
167
106
If power delivery is as stable as they're saying (ripple <2mA) then I can't see how this wouldn't be good for overclocking. Though I suspect Haswell the CPU will give out long before its VRMs.
 

Haserath

Senior member
Sep 12, 2010
793
1
81
Without anything other than the number of phases, we really can't conclude anything.

It's like saying the 5870 is faster than the 480 simply because it had 1600 shaders vs 448.
 

IntelUser2000

Elite Member
Oct 14, 2003
8,686
3,787
136
That Chinese site slide shows an experimental iVR, not the one they'll be using it in Haswell.
 

Haserath

Senior member
Sep 12, 2010
793
1
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isvr08.jpg

This slide points out that each regulator is thermally constrained to a lower amperage, but we don't know what.

With 20 power cells powering a 84W chip, then it must be constrained to single digit amps, or it might be yields and other ICs taking up separate cells.