That's not what you said though.If i was wrong and they didnt need to redesign the HSF then IvyBridge should have lower operating temperatures than SB.
That's not what you said though.If i was wrong and they didnt need to redesign the HSF then IvyBridge should have lower operating temperatures than SB.
That's not what you said though.
Also IvyBridge is not soldered to the Heat spreader like FX8350 and it effects the HSF design and size.
You're missing including headroom for Turbo mode. See this post.This is not true at all. Actually look at the graph's points. At 125W, the i7-3770K is at 4.6GHz, which is a 31% increase.
Just no,
Let me explain what TDP is for,
The following is from the AMD Phenom II TDP specs.
So, for the CPU to work as it should the HSF should meet the above specs.
That means for a 125W TDP CPU, the HSF at 38c Ambient should be able to keep the CPU temperature at or bellow 61c.
The FX8350 die size is 315mm2, Ivy is just 160mm2. Not only that but FX module topography(placement) is completely different than Ivy.
Same goes for the 130W TDP 2011 dies, they are 400mm2+ and the core placement is completely different than Ivy 1155 die.
BD/PD power maps are completely different than Ivy and Sandy.
AMD is simply scamming people and putting peoples motherboards at risk.
http://www.intel.com/content/dam/ww...-guides/3rd-gen-core-lga1155-socket-guide.pdf5.5 Thermal and Power Specifications
The following notes apply to the tables in this section.
Note Definition
1.The TDPs given are not the maximum power the processor can generate. Analysis indicates that
real applications are unlikely to cause the processor to consume the theoretical maximum power
dissipation for sustained periods of time.
2.TDP workload may consist of a combination of a processor-core intensive and a graphics-core
intensive applications.
3.The thermal solution needs to ensure that the processor temperature does not exceed the maximum junction temperature (Tj,max
) limit, as measured by the DTS and the critical temperature bit.
Page 435. Thermal Design Power (TDP) should be used for processor thermal solution design targets. TDP is not the maximum
power that the processor can dissipate. TDP is measured at DTS = -1.
TDP is achieved with the Memory configured for DDR3 1333 and 2 DIMMs per channel.
If someone shows some program at full load not exceeding stated TDP on an IB and grossly exceeding TDP on a Vishera what will your response be? Because I'm pretty sure that's not hard to demonstrate..
Right, so when the companies say the TDP is 77W and 125W respectively that doesn't mean the TDP has anything to do with power consumption, is that what we're supposed to think?
If you think thermal design power has to do with temperature and not heat (equivalent to power) then you have the wrong idea. Intel and AMD both flat out listing TDP as a power figure on their processor listings and they're not being inconsistent.
Yes, there are temperature limits where the TDP only applies if you meet them, because power consumption is temperature dependent. So there are ambient and cooling requirements. But if, while running that test program, IB doesn't exceed 77W while also not exceeding Tjmax or whatever temperature points are specified, and Vishera does exceed 125W while also not exceeding Tcasemax or whatever it specifies then what will your response be?
And if it exceeds 125W while also exceeding the allowable case temperature under an ambient temperature that's acceptable by their datasheet and running a stock cooler then it means AMD did a bad job with the cooling and yes, are screwing motherboard manufacturers, OEMs, and other customers by providing the wrong specs.
This story is an example of how AMD may never pass Intel long term. AMD has always competed with Intel because the 2 companies set their chip prices to be competitive.
However, with the K7, AMD had the dominant CPU for quite a while. Intel recognized it, and pushed R&D hard, and pretty quickly passed AMD (quick for chip design. I believe it was within 1 generation) and hasn't looked back.
So, yes, I think AMD might be catching up, but Intel's size and resources allow it to get back in front
Can anyone now stop taking the TDP as the maximum power consumption of AMD and Intel CPUs ???
Intel used collusion to prevent AMD from exploiting their performance dominance, earning them over a billion $ in fines (not enough). If AMD had been able to sell chips in Dell and other big OEMs in the early aughts, they would have had the $ for R&D to keep up with Intel.
The complaints are numerous and many system builders are expressing their frustrations. "It's a fiasco. There's no product in the channel. It's all going to Dell. AMD is divorcing the channel," said Glen Coffield, president of CheapGuys. Coffield went on to say "I'm being treated like the red-headed stepchild. Intel was always a company for the big guys, and AMD was always a company for the small guys like us. The channel made AMD. Now they're at the dance with Dell, and they've thrown us to the wolves."
Another system builder that chose to remain anonymous remarked that "There's nothing out there. They're screwing the channel. All the stuff is going to HP and Dell, and the only inventory available to us is old legacy stuff, single-core and low-power stuff no one is buying. There's little doubt in my mind that it's because of Dell and HP."
http://www.dailytech.com/article.aspx?newsid=4782
It means that the power consumption can be more than 77W/125W and the CPU will still have 77W/125W TDP requirements for the Heat-Sink Fan.
TDP has to do with the ability of the Heat-Sink Fan to dissipate 77W/125W of power and keep the CPUs at or lower than their Tcase Max as illustrated by the tables above.
If it would exceed the Tcase Max, it will throttle down meaning it overcome its nominal TDP. Using/consuming more than 125W means that the Tcase Max was not reached thus the CPU was operating with in TDP limits. You have to understand and everyone else that a CPU or any IC can use more "power" than its TDP rating and still be within its nominal temperature. That can happen because 1) not all of the power is dissipated through the HSF, 2) the modern CPUs have Heat-Spreaders to assist the HSF, 3) Core and Logic placement (die topology) plays a significant role in CPU thermals and more.
AMD's market opportunities were supply limited on the AMD side of the equation. Despite what Intel did to the demand side, the reality is that AMD had a limited supply of chips to sell and they sold everything they could get to leave the fab.
Rebates did not prevent AMD from building more fabs. Spending $5.4B on ATI did.
To a certain degree; it's not as if they could have sold each K8 at $300+. Besides, they in all likelihood needed to bin the CPUs anway, I don't think AMD ever had their manufacturing perfected so that all CPUs would have reached top-bin frequency/TDP limits. Combined with the fact that the later P-IV's weren't that bad, the extra profits AMD could have made probably weren't earth-shaking. The $1.25 billion payment from Intel probably covered that pretty well.Amd could have sold their processors at a higher price. Supply-demand and all.
To a certain degree; it's not as if they could have sold each K8 at $300+. Besides, they in all likelihood needed to bin the CPUs anway, I don't think AMD ever had their manufacturing perfected so that all CPUs would have reached top-bin frequency/TDP limits. Combined with the fact that the later P-IV's weren't that bad, the extra profits AMD could have made probably weren't earth-shaking. The $1.25 billion payment from Intel probably covered that pretty well.
Outside the "TDP" marketing nonsense, isn't TDP one of many specifications for heatsink design engineers to follow? For instance, doesn't TDP of 125W just means that the accompanying heatsink must have the capability to dissipate at minimum 125Ws without it failing?
The temperature rising on IB isn't a problem if it's still in spec, it doesn't matter if it's higher. They could have raised the spec; if the processor can tolerate it it doesn't make a difference. Since we're not seeing mass recalls of IB's it's obviously not a problem except for people trying to overclock it as much as possible.