Originally posted by: soccerballtux
Larger die size? More heat.
Hyperthreading is making use of the CPU where it previously wasn't being used (in Penryn). IE, while a core may be stable at 80% load, at 100%, it's not-- Penryn at 100% load would actually be like an i7 (with the hyperthreading working) at 80% load.
Originally posted by: Nemesis 1
Better yet in water cooled setups . Get readings from water out of Cpu for temp. Tells a differant story all together.
Originally posted by: thilan29
Originally posted by: Nemesis 1
Better yet in water cooled setups . Get readings from water out of Cpu for temp. Tells a differant story all together.
How does that give accurate temps?
Originally posted by: bruceyg
I am a little suprised to see this.
Originally posted by: JackyP
Idontcare, actually I have been led to believe that i7 can overclock better than Core 2 and Ph II quadcores on high-end air and water, but on sub-zero cooling it seems to top out earlier.
I can understand why people are surprised, increased L2 latency and more stages, normally allow higher clocks (at least that's what the layman thinks).
What could cause such issues? Speed path or other architectural issues? Sub-zero cooling is certainly not limited by heat, now is it?
I'd venture to say that a new stepping will solve those problems and slightly decrease temps (together with even more mature process tech).
....if it exceeds a certain level, the processor automatically reduces its clock speed."
Originally posted by: IntelUser2000
I heard the D0 stepping coming with Core i7 975 will have much improved overclocking headroom.
Originally posted by: JackyP
Idontcare, actually I have been led to believe that i7 can overclock better than Core 2 and Ph II quadcores on high-end air and water, but on sub-zero cooling it seems to top out earlier.
I can understand why people are surprised, increased L2 latency and more stages, normally allow higher clocks (at least that's what the layman thinks).
What could cause such issues? Speed path or other architectural issues? Sub-zero cooling is certainly not limited by heat, now is it?
I'd venture to say that a new stepping will solve those problems and slightly decrease temps (together with even more mature process tech).
Cherry picked i7 975 did 5ghz on air IIRC (over at xtremesystems).Originally posted by: IntelUser2000
I heard the D0 stepping coming with Core i7 975 will have much improved overclocking headroom.
No, actually I didn't mean what I said in this case. I was thinking about L1 latency (3->4 cycles). It is generally believed that increased L1 latency (may) allow higher clocks, all else being equal. Well, obviously Nehalem kept nothing else equal and SMT may have made such an increase necessary anyway or anything else for that matter.Originally posted by: FAHgamer
What do you mean "increased L2 latency"? Compared to what? (Nehalem's L2 latency is 11 cycles, whereas in Penryn it's 14-16 - I don't remember how much it is exactly in the latter, but it is much more than Nehalem.)
Edit: Oops, my bad, you meant Core2 and PhenomII 's higher L2 latency.
But if you factor in the fact that Nehalem's L2 cache is smaller in total size and larger in cell size, it should reach much lower latencies at the same voltage.
Why would you be surprised? Timing closure is a tough part of the design. Couple that with power, IPC and other requirements and its actually a damn miracle to successfully pull off a successful IC design. Unless you designed it, you wouldn't know attributes such as the length of the critical path(s), individual transistor characteristics, etc. and would therefore be a little ill-informed to make a judgement call on the i7 vs. other CPUs.Originally posted by: bruceyg
I am a little suprised to see this.
http://valid.canardpc.com/records.php
Originally posted by: dmens
Originally posted by: IntelUser2000
I heard the D0 stepping coming with Core i7 975 will have much improved overclocking headroom.
yes one of the things worked on was speed at higher core voltages.
Originally posted by: BTRY B 529th FA BN
? did you mean higher speeds at lower core voltages?
Originally posted by: FAHgamer
Originally posted by: JackyP
Idontcare, actually I have been led to believe that i7 can overclock better than Core 2 and Ph II quadcores on high-end air and water, but on sub-zero cooling it seems to top out earlier.
I can understand why people are surprised, increased L2 latency and more stages, normally allow higher clocks (at least that's what the layman thinks).
What could cause such issues? Speed path or other architectural issues? Sub-zero cooling is certainly not limited by heat, now is it?
I'd venture to say that a new stepping will solve those problems and slightly decrease temps (together with even more mature process tech).
What do you mean "increased L2 latency"? Compared to what? (Nehalem's L2 latency is 11 cycles, whereas in Penryn it's 14-16 - I don't remember how much it is exactly in the latter, but it is much more than Nehalem.)
Edit: Oops, my bad, you meant Core2 and PhenomII 's higher L2 latency; I got it now.
But if you factor in the fact that Nehalem's L2 cache is smaller in total size and larger in cell size, it should be able to reach much lower latency at the same voltage.
How many pipeline stages does the Nehalem architecture have?
