- Nov 26, 2005
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Did the ipc, no not insane clown possee, IPC improve from Bloomfield to Gulftown? If so how much?
Not really. Gulftown is a variant of Westmere, which is a die shrink of Nehalem. Bloomfield is a variant of Nehalem.
AES instructions were introduced in Westmere, though. In applications that use them, you may see a significant performance boost.
The biggest advantage of Westmere is that it runs cooler and can usually clock higher. Nehalem usually runs pretty hot (had a friend whose i7-920 ran at 55C idle on Hyper 212+ at stock voltage), but Westmere usually runs around 65C under extreme load. That i7 I mentioned would push 90C, even after being reseated several times.
Nehalem usually tops out at 3.8-4.2 GHz. Westmere can often hit 4.2-4.5.
Hyper 212+ is a great cooler for $20. My 2500K maxes at about 55C full load at 1.4v with it. Usually it runs at around 25C idle.
(had a friend whose i7-920 ran at 55C idle on Hyper 212+ at stock voltage),
...
That i7 I mentioned would push 90C, even after being reseated several times.
It shouldn't have much trouble with a 130W CPU. It worked very well on a 125W Phenom X4 9750 at 2.8 GHz and on Core 2 Quads.
That did eventually blow up my motherboard, though.