Originally posted by: StrangerGuy
Heat output and power consumption of a CPU increases to the square of the voltage increase...Simply put, a minor 0.1V difference means a significant power draw difference.
Originally posted by: Smartazz
Originally posted by: StrangerGuy
Heat output and power consumption of a CPU increases to the square of the voltage increase...Simply put, a minor 0.1V difference means a significant power draw difference.
So there's no different between these two CPUs other than that?
Like lopri and idontcare already said, there's no difference at stock speeds. Don't you overclock your 3800, though? If so, everyone who has bought one says that the EE's don't overclock well at all, compared to the 89 watt X2 3800's.Originally posted by: Smartazz
So there's no different between these two CPUs other than that?
Originally posted by: Jhhnn
That's 35 watts, not 65 watts-
http://www.amdcompare.com/us-en/desktop/details.aspx?opn=ADD3800IAT5CU
A huge difference in power consumption and cooling requirements... ~3X the price, however...
Originally posted by: shamans
what volts do the 35W ones run at while idle with cool n quiet?
I know my 89W one runs at 1.4 V @ load and 1.1 V @ idle (by default).
Originally posted by: Smartazz
Originally posted by: shamans
what volts do the 35W ones run at while idle with cool n quiet?
I know my 89W one runs at 1.4 V @ load and 1.1 V @ idle (by default).
I wonder how low they can go. BTW, is cool n quiet worth using, does it slow down performance at all?
Originally posted by: tanishalfelven
Originally posted by: Smartazz
Originally posted by: shamans
what volts do the 35W ones run at while idle with cool n quiet?
I know my 89W one runs at 1.4 V @ load and 1.1 V @ idle (by default).
I wonder how low they can go. BTW, is cool n quiet worth using, does it slow down performance at all?
use rmclock. far better than cool and quite alone.