- Dec 10, 2000
 
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Just been re-reading this old article about CPU power consumption. It says the AMD chips produce more heat per MHz because of their higher IPC. This makes me wonder, if HyperThreading makes more efficient use of the P4 core, presumably that means it'll make them hotter too?
Interestingly in the table in that article about the P4, Intel didn't give a maximum thermal power, but just a little arithmetic suggests a 2.53GHz P4 would have a maximum thermal power of 80W - do the math from the max current, just the same as the AMD. Now, I haven't got Intel's figures for the P4 3.06GHz to hand, but I guess we all expected a typical thermal power of 72W or so, so can I suppose it might have a max thermal power of 96W? And if it could actually hit that in operation because of hyperthreading? We'll all really need huge new HSFs with 0.2C/W ratings. Ouch.
			
			Interestingly in the table in that article about the P4, Intel didn't give a maximum thermal power, but just a little arithmetic suggests a 2.53GHz P4 would have a maximum thermal power of 80W - do the math from the max current, just the same as the AMD. Now, I haven't got Intel's figures for the P4 3.06GHz to hand, but I guess we all expected a typical thermal power of 72W or so, so can I suppose it might have a max thermal power of 96W? And if it could actually hit that in operation because of hyperthreading? We'll all really need huge new HSFs with 0.2C/W ratings. Ouch.
				
		
			