The urban legend moniker wasnt directed to you, i thought you would had understood.
No, but it is directed at the people whom I am citing (I understand it is also directed at those who claim unrealistic results for older 8320 chips or tout their golden chips as the norm, but it should be noted that I am not discussing those results. They are outliers, or just plain liars).
While we are on the topic of CPUs for the AM3+ eventualy i ll point for thoses who tweaks their settings that, at least one year ago, all FXs were not born equals, and that 8350 are better than 8320, 6350 and 4350 being the same compared to the 6300 and 4300 respectively.
One doesnt simply buy a 8320/6300/4300 and get the 8350/6350/4350 by just changing the settings, the former named are inherently better according to hardware.fr overclocking/downclocking/undervolting/overvolting made on their samples, this has also been confirmed during the 8350/8370E comparison and the 8370 should follow the trend by being noticeably better than the 8350 as well.
Correct. From the original FX lineup, the 8350 is better than the 8320. Same wafer, with binning to differentiate product.
hardware.fr notwithstanding, every result I've seen thus far indicates that the 8370E is now eating the 8350's lunch, and the 8320E is basically doing the same. Yeah there's some good 8350s out there (and at least one bum 8320E chip that I've seen), but overall I'm seeing 4.5 ghz @ 1.36v or lower from the E chips, which is better than what most 8350s can put up.
Originally I had thought the 8320E and 8370E had come from the same wafers as the other chips and just had different stock/turbo speeds and VIDs to fit into the 95W power envelope. At first glance, it appeared to be so. Then people tried overclocking them, and now it is apparent that things are quite different.
At ~$140-$150, the 8320E is now the go-to FX chip, in my opinion. Sure, it's binned lower than the 8370E and (by logical extension) the 8350, but it does not come from the same wafer as the 8350. Process refinements really did make a difference, enough so that the 8320E deserves a nod. It is possible that the 8310 is capable of similar feats and may amount to an even-better deal than the 8320E, but most people buying them seem to be pairing the with motherboards that do not permit much overclocking, so there are no available data points.