Arachnotronic
Lifer
- Mar 10, 2006
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Thanks for the link. Finally some hard data when it comes to power:
Not bad! I wonder how it will compete with Bay Trail-M, which is supposed to run up to 2.7GHz and have an SoC TDP of 4W - 6.5W
Thanks for the link. Finally some hard data when it comes to power:
Not bad! I wonder how it will compete with Bay Trail-M, which is supposed to run up to 2.7GHz and have an SoC TDP of 4W - 6.5W
Google Chrome Flash playback: 100% CPU in use, some frame drops.
Google Chrome HTML5 playback: Approx 20% CPU used by Chrome processes
IE10 HTML5: 5-7% CPU
IE 10 Flash: Approx 10%
Darn you FLAAAAAAAAASH! Wouldn't be so bad if it was more consistent, shouldn't have to run IE to get good optimizations.
We'll find out next year.
That is better than I thought it would be, esp at 1,4ghz.Test done on high-performance profile under battery power.
Test 2 – ALU
Standing usage immediately before test: 7.9W (7% utilization, ave 1Ghz clock in quiescent state)
Test max power drain (ALU Test): 12.3W (94% CPU load by Crystalmark Process)
Test power: 4.4W
Normalised: 790mw/Core/Ghz
Test 2 – FPU
Standing usage immediately before test: 8.1W (7% utilization, ave 1Ghz clock in quiescent state)
Test max power drain (FPU Test): 13.1W (94% CPU load by Crystalmark Process)
Test power: 5W
Normalised: 900mw/Core/Ghz
Estimated max power usage of 4 Temash CPU-cores at 1Ghz, 100%: 3.6W (+/- 10%)
Estimated max power usage of 4 Temash CPU-cores at 1.4Ghz, 100%: 5W (+/- 10%)
The graph shows D&M (D being 10w) go upto and perphaps over 2,7ghz.Not bad! I wonder how it will compete with Bay Trail-M, which is supposed to run up to 2.7GHz and have an SoC TDP of 4W - 6.5W
Power consumption aside it seems like the battery is quite small. From amazon listing it says it has a 3-cell 2650mah, so assuming 7.4v, it has a 20whr battery - unless I have messed up somewhere - and It states 3.5 hour battery life.
http://www.amazon.com/Acer-Aspire-V5-122P-0600-11-6-Inch-Touchscreen/dp/B00CM1AAP0/ref=amtcd_B00CM1AANW_B00CM1AAP0
Thanks for the link. Finally some hard data when it comes to power:
Another test:Update 13:40 13 May 2013: Test 3 Prime95 Torture Test (Blend includes memory testing)
Standing usage immediately before test: 6.7W (7% utilization, ave 1Ghz clock in quiescent state)
System max power drain during test : 17.8W (91% CPU load by Prime95 Process)
Test power: 11.1W
Test 4 Prime95 Torture Test (Small FFT minimal memory usage)
Standing usage immediately before test: 7.2W (7% utilization, ave 1Ghz clock in quiescent state)
Test max power drain : 15.8W (91% CPU load by Prime95 Process)
Test power: 8.6W
Normalised: 1700mW / Core / Ghz
Test5 Prime95 Toture (Blend) + Cinebench OPenGL
Standing usage immediately before test: 7.2W (7% utilization, ave 1Ghz clock in quiescent state)
System max power drain during test : 21.1W
Test power: 13.9 (CPU, GPU, Memory)
http://www.notebookcheck.com/Im-Test-AMD-A6-1450-APU-Temash.92206.0.htmlLeistungsaufnahme
Leerlauf: (Messungen auf Windows-8-Desktop)
Last: (Messungen mit Höchstleistung, maximaler Helligkeit und WLAN an)
- Energiesparmodus, minimale Helligkeit, WLAN aus: 5,3 Watt
- Ausbalanciert, maximale Helligkeit, WLAN aus: 6,8 Watt
- Höchstleistung, maximale Helligkeit, WLAN an: 10,3 Watt
3-cell in series is a nominal 11.1V, so that's more like 30-35Wh. Not impressive, but that's how lightweight ones go. A 6-cell option, or better, a machine designed for a 6-cell, would be good for all-day use, without harming the battery's service life (much like Atom, Zacate, or ULV Cores).Power consumption aside it seems like the battery is quite small. From amazon listing it says it has a 3-cell 2650mah, so assuming 7.4v, it has a 20whr battery - unless I have messed up somewhere - and It states 3.5 hour battery life.
Power draw under max load is a bit high, also the system seems to be a huge addition to the power draw.
Min brightness and WiFi off is 5.3w
Max brightness and WiFi on is 10.3w
The power virus tests are pointless for devices like that. It's good to see them but they have zero relevance for usage of the chip like that.
They are not pointless for gaming. With GPU+CPU usage power draw is much higher than with CPU load alone. Such tests are important to reveal throttling or heat issues. In this notebookcheck review the CPU throttled for whatever reason. Heat or TDP issue. Gaming tests don't look good.
Given that AMD's performance estimates, compared to Bobcat, appear dead on, on, and power looks alright...what's the pricing on these like?
Power usage of screen and HDD, odd things like added thunderbolt chipsets ect... it all adds up.we are really reaching the point where CPU power usage is baraly relevant
I was thinking pricing for the whole computers.I believe a fudzilla article mentioned 40-70$ range or so.
Main point of interest being the system power usage. From which we can derive the dynamic load power usage
Correct, going from balanced with WiFi off to high performance with WiFi on increases power usage by 3.5W. But why would using that highest idle power consumption as a baseline for determining load dynamic power be non-ideal? Other than the fact that both the performance measured earlier in the review and the corresponding dynamic power would likely decrease if using the balanced profile instead. I will agree that it seems a bit odd for the single-threaded cinebench at 1.4 GHz to show a dynamic power usage of 3.4W while the multi-threaded cinebench at 1.1 GHz only bumps up to 4.6W... but yeah, can only speculate as to why that might be. It can't just be an issue with power gating because that would push up the baseline as well. And it doesn't make sense that much higher voltage would be needed for operation at 1.4 GHz since I'd expect Temash to be the exact same die as Kabini which can operate at far higher frequencies.The difference between balanced mode w/wifi off and maximum performance mode w/wifi on is 3.5W. That's wifi on but idle. It's not going to use 3.5W, it's not even going to use a tiny fraction of it. The only explanation is that moving away from balanced mode is preventing the CPU from entering as low power of a state, which means that it's probably not a good point to use as a zero for SoC power consumption. Even the other modes are probably not really close to zero.
I expect that keeping it at maximum performance could also be preventing unused cores from being power gated, which would skew the single threaded test closer to the peak.
Agreed. My guess is that the power profiles on this particular product aren't exactly implemented correctly. Since it certainly seems like maximum performance mode is allowing the GPU to run rampant while still reigning in the CPU.It's weird that it only lets you go up to 1-1.1GHz with all the cores pegged but GPU not used, when using the GPU exposes a much higher power ceiling. I wonder what's regulating this.
Not without reason why AMD has integrated a turbo (dock) mode, which can raise the clock speed to 100 MHz increments up to 1.4 GHz. To enable this, the notebook must (whether on battery or AC power) "Balanced" or "High performance" power profile in the run. Unfortunately, the turbo turned out in our measurements are only partially effective: the full 1.4 GHz processor reaches only single-threaded load, with each additional thread decreases the average frequency by about 100 MHz. We address this point deliberately from an average, since all four cores constantly fluctuate between base and turbo clock rate. Absence of other test equipment we currently can not tell if this is a special feature of the Aspire V5-122, or the general behavior of the A6-1450 APU - 1.4GHz at constant performance would be significantly better TDP -. Temperature or conditional Downclocking appears to us in pure CPU load but not plausible (see Power consumption / temperature).
Correct, going from balanced with WiFi off to high performance with WiFi on increases power usage by 3.5W. But why would using that highest idle power consumption as a baseline for determining load dynamic power be non-ideal? Other than the fact that both the performance measured earlier in the review and the corresponding dynamic power would likely decrease if using the balanced profile instead.
I will agree that it seems a bit odd for the single-threaded cinebench at 1.4 GHz to show a dynamic power usage of 3.4W while the multi-threaded cinebench at 1.1 GHz only bumps up to 4.6W... but yeah, can only speculate as to why that might be. It can't just be an issue with power gating because that would push up the baseline as well. And it doesn't make sense that much higher voltage would be needed for operation at 1.4 GHz since I'd expect Temash to be the exact same die as Kabini which can operate at far higher frequencies.
