Yes its a bit OCed to 705MHz, i can push it up to 800MHz with this setup but its purpose is HTPC so no need to. Also this is a slim Mini-iTX setup so no extra GPUs![]()
trinity and llano IGP perform quite close at the same clock, at 800MHz llano is probably very competitive compared to stock trinity, anyway,
if you decide to test some more, I would be curious to see the impact of lower memory clock (like 1333), my guess is that tomshardware used a 1600MHz 6670, so trinity with 2133 ram could probably improve on that result.
Here's two exceptionally low cost CPU/mobo/RAM/GPU sets. If they were actually budget builds, the rest of the parts (case, HDD, and so on) would have the same costs, so all I'm looking at is the difference between an APU and a CPU+dGPU. I picked the cheapest possible component for the motherboard and the RAM (but the APU got 1866MHz RAM). The Athlon was the cheapest quad core option.
CPU: AMD A10-5800K 3.8GHz Quad-Core Processor ($129.99 @ Newegg)
Motherboard: MSI FM2-A55M-E33 Micro ATX FM2 Motherboard ($49.99 @ Newegg)
Memory: G.Skill Ripjaws X Series 4GB (2 x 2GB) DDR3-1866 Memory ($37.99 @ Newegg)
Total: $217.97
CPU: AMD Athlon II X4 640 3.0GHz Quad-Core Processor ($64.99 @ Amazon)
Motherboard: ECS A960M-M3 Micro ATX AM3+ Motherboard ($39.99 @ Amazon)
Memory: Mushkin Silverline 4GB (2 x 2GB) DDR3-1333 Memory ($26.98 @ Amazon)
Video Card: PowerColor Radeon HD 7750 1GB Video Card ($89.98 @ Newegg after $15 rebate)
Total: $221.94 after a $15 rebate.
So the version with a dedicated graphics card is around $5 more after a rebate, $20 before it. Yet it'll perform 50% better. Sure, the APU is acceptable in games, but why would you get it when the next option is barely any more and performs way better?
very good example, the second option is much faster for gaming,
even if you stay on the same platform, is easy to see where you can save some money to invest in higher gaming performance.
a quick look on newegg,
$109.99 5600k 5800k $$129.99
4GB DDR3 1600 $28.99 2x2GB DDR3 1866 $37.99
Asrock a75 fm2 = $54.99
with the CPU and memory there is a $30 difference, for almost no penalty for the CPU performance,
obviously 30 is not enough for a decent card, but, if you follow the same patern, you could pick a cheaper board like this asrock instead of a $80-90 A85 board, also it could be the difference from a cooler you could buy to OC the A10 CPU+IGP or something (I suppose CPU cooling and MB VRMs will suffer less with the IGP disabled)...
you can buy a 7750 DDR5 for as low as $85 on newegg after rebate...
so even if you keep the rest unchanged, this would be like $55 difference for a $ 300-400 build, that's like 15% for a a gain as high as 100%
(see here)
but your example is even better