Originally posted by: Mik3y
dont forget e. each letter stands for the type of core used for that cpu. the "c" stands for northwood core, and the "e" stands for the current prescott core. the "a" and "b" are older cores. i forget what their names are.
Actually, a 2.4a is a Prescott 533MHz FSB w/out Hyperthreading. There was no Willamette 2.4GHz, so the flavor without the letter designation is a Northwood 400MHz FSB.Originally posted by: VIAN
Ex.
2.4 -- Williamette - 256KB L2 cache, 400MHz FSB
2.4A - Northwood - 512KB L2 cache, 400MHz FSB
2.4B - Northwood - 512KB L2 cache, 533MHz FSB
2.4C - Northwood - 512KB L2 cache, 800MHz FSB, Hyperthreading
2.4E - Prescott --- 1024KB L2 cache, 800MHz FSB, Hyperthreading, SSE3, Longer Pipeline
So far, that's what it is, however, there is a new letter about to emerge. Letter 'F', which will note 64-bit compatability.
Ex.
2.4 -- Williamette - 256KB L2 cache, 400MHz FSB
2.4A - Northwood - 512KB L2 cache, 400MHz FSB
2.4B - Northwood - 512KB L2 cache, 533MHz FSB
2.4C - Northwood - 512KB L2 cache, 800MHz FSB, Hyperthreading
2.4E - Prescott --- 1024KB L2 cache, 800MHz FSB, Hyperthreading, SSE3, Longer Pipeline
So far, that's what it is, however, there is a new letter about to emerge. Letter 'F', which will note 64-bit compatability.
Actually, a 2.4a is a Prescott 533MHz FSB w/out Hyperthreading. There was no Willamette 2.4GHz, so the flavor without the letter designation is a Northwood 400MHz FSB.
Similar to the 2.26GHz and 2.53GHz varieties... Since there was no previous version of the same MHz speed, those too have no letter designation.
Intel Introduces Processor NumbersOriginally posted by: xerocool
hey has anyone noticed the naming schemes for some of the new intels these days? i went into frys and just realized that there are numbers like 415 or 425 or something like that (maybe it was 735, i don't really remember) what's going on with that?
Originally posted by: Wingznut
Intel Introduces Processor NumbersOriginally posted by: xerocool
hey has anyone noticed the naming schemes for some of the new intels these days? i went into frys and just realized that there are numbers like 415 or 425 or something like that (maybe it was 735, i don't really remember) what's going on with that?
Intel Processor Number Information
