Extelleron
Diamond Member
- Dec 26, 2005
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Originally posted by: 21stHermit
I'd buy the $85 E2180 over the E2140. The only way these low buck CPU's make any sense is on a $50 MB, which you can't OC.Originally posted by: VirtualLarry
I'd still buy a $60 E2140 over this thing though.
Since cache takes more die space than the core, can you imagine how many E1200 dies Intel gets on a 300mm wafer. A bizillion.I bet Intel's OEM customers are getting a really sweet deal on these CPUs though.![]()
I'm fairly certain this is still Allendale core, which means it has a 111mm^2 die size and 2MB of L2 cache on die. Some of these E1200s probably have 2MB of functioning L2 and are just disabled, others will be cores that failed as E4xxx's or E2xxx's.
Cache actually doesn't take up too much space on the processor die as it's much denser than logic transistors.
A single C2D core with no L2 cache is 19M transistors / 36mm^2 in size, meaning that 2 cores will be around 72mm^2 for 38M transistors. Conroe has ~290M transistors in a 143mm^2 die, meaning half of it is cache and 248M~ SRAM transistors fit into the same space as 38M logic transistors.
It just isn't worth it for Intel to fab 3-4 different CPUs with different amounts of cache - it's easier and in the long run cheaper to make 1-2 different CPUs and just disable cache to make lower SKUs.
