- Mar 3, 2017
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A quick Google said 2.75mm² vs 2.8mm².
Edit: but I'd defer to Hitman's numbers above
This looks like a single core holding 5.1 GHz takes 18 W - 20 W to me. The initial power rush is a transition and probably due to multiple cores spinning up at the beginning of the test as the scene is loaded but then settles down to 18 W - 20 W once the pure 1T compute starts.
Edit: This is also package power, so the core power is obviously less than that and scaling up to 5.7 GHz won't be nearly as dramatic as you make it seem.
Little better than totally ridiculous, but it also can seen that it cannot sustain 5.1Ghz but scales down to flat 5GHz.
But that kind of power levels are not acceptable at all, they are straight desktop-class power uses.
For comparison Intels problematic Raptor lakes only start have such a 1T power levels somewhere 13600K levels, even 14900K does not consume more than about 35W at full 1T boost.
even 14900K does not consume more than about 35W at full 1T boost.
April launch
30%+ IPC
$499 9950X (Pending. 8 Ball says, "Outlook Hazy")
If Asus is clueless enough to sell a laptop with deficient cooling, how's that AMD's fault ?Strix point seems worse and worse. It's ridiculous that it even cannot sustain max ST boost clocks on sub 30W devices - what full Zen5 @5,.7GHz consumes, full 100W @ ST workloads? Thats starts to be as ridiculous as Intel Raptor lake fiasco.
If Asus is clueless enough to sell a laptop with deficient cooling, how's that AMD's fault ?
i wonder which laptop David is using then?The cooling is good enough, in ST Computerbase made a test with 300s seconds duration and there s no throttling.
In performance mode, wich is 30-33W, there s no throttling in MT unless standard or whisper mode are enabled, seems that we have an urban legends that is forged live in this thread, lol...
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AMD Ryzen AI 9 HX 370 „Strix Point“ im Zenbook S16 im Test
AMD „Strix Point“, die neue APU mit Zen-5(c)-Kernen, RDNA 3.5 und starker NPU, ist da. Im Test ist der Ryzen AI 9 HX 370 sehr effizient.www.computerbase.de
What is odd to me is that if it really is only a printing error that caused this 1-2 week delay, why not stick to the schedule and have reviews out today (or yesterday)? Are they really waiting to see what Intel does and hope that people bother re-benchmarking RPL? I think the story has become so large they will be bechmarked with the new microcode. Well, they say waiting is the hardest part.
Dunno what he s using but at Computerbase they measure 18-19W average SoC power and the frequency is constant at about 5GHz according to their graph, eventually he got a pre production laptop that has not the final bios.So is A
i wonder which laptop David is using then?
The cooling is good enough, in ST Computerbase made a test with 300 seconds duration and there s no throttling.
In performance mode, wich is 30-33W, there s no throttling in MT, nnly if standard or whisper mode are enabled, seems that we have an urban legends that is forged live in this thread, lol...
![]()
AMD Ryzen AI 9 HX 370 „Strix Point“ im Zenbook S16 im Test
AMD „Strix Point“, die neue APU mit Zen-5(c)-Kernen, RDNA 3.5 und starker NPU, ist da. Im Test ist der Ryzen AI 9 HX 370 sehr effizient.www.computerbase.de
i wonder which laptop David is using then?
The ST test shows a very minor throttling to 5 GHz from 5.1 GHz. It's not a power throttle, though, as it is only using <= 20 W. It's got to be thermal throttling due to the hot spot effect and the laptop probably trying to keep fans low.
Pretty sure it's the same one, he was showing the same sustained frequency as CB.
The ST test shows a very minor throttling to 5 GHz from 5.1 GHz. It's not a power throttle, though, as it is only using <= 20 W. It's got to be thermal throttling due to the hot spot effect and the laptop probably trying to keep fans low.
That s a very smal throttling because at the end of the test it still get to roughly 5GHz, the rest of the time it s about the same with a mall peak a 5140MHz.
All this is within error margins, unfortunately they didnt made a graph for the temp but since it doesnt throttle in MT there s no reason that temp could be too high in ST even accounting for the thermal density.
If it's thermal throttling at all, is it possible that we're also seeing more aggressive process migration to move the hot spot around? That's not unheard of when mitigating core temp, whereas here it's likely skin temp, but maybe they're treated similarly.
I don't think skin temp is the problem, that's more a problem when pushing total power. With the large difference in ST to MT clocks, the hot spot temperature is much more likely the culprit. Asus could probably prevent the throttling but they don't want the fans kicking up too much every time the CPU boosts on 1 or 2 cores.
I don’t think ASUS is the right OEM to judge, I rather wait for Lenovo or HP make better comparisons.
Also isn’t it strange that all of not most of the Strix laptops available right now are from ASUS? Same was for the X Elite.
You don't think that > 10 W in one core might cause thermal throttling because < 30 W across 12 cores doesn't thermal throttle? You realize that is a very large jump in power density right? It could easily be hot spot temp causing the throttling. . .
If that's the case, then more aggressive process migration probably accounts for the remainder of the performance deficit compared to expectations that isn't accounted for by the relatively minor decrease in average clocks.
At the 50s mark it hit 4996MHz but at the 190s mark it goes at 5105MHz, so if there s thermal density motivated throttling it couldnt get back to 5105 after 190s, the frequency would just gradually and lightly tank.
More likely that AMD s boost algorithm is very fast and if a slightly lower loading occur for a very short duration the core frequency will be reduced very shortly before the max loadin will get it increasing again in a matter of tens of micrseconds, btw ST test was done in perf mode wich mean with the fan spinning faster than in standard mode.
So Apple is more cache to make up for the frequency difference and AMD using higher frequency but using less cache?Apple's core sizes are decently bigger than Zen cores on equivalent nodes with similar design frequencies. AMD's high performance cores come close to reach high frequencies.
Edit: I broke it down here but I'll copy again if you don't want to read the full post:
Zen 4 Core = 2.56 mm2 with max boost of ~5.7 GHz.
Zen 4c Core = 1.43 mm2 with max boost of ~3.7 GHz.
M2 core = 2.76 mm2 with max boost of 3.5 GHz.
Zen 4 Core + L2 = 3.84 mm2 with max boost of ~5.7 GHz.
Zen 4c Core + L2 = 2.48 mm2 with max boost of ~3.7 GHz
M2 Core + L2 ~ 7.06 mm2 with max boost of 3.5 GHz
Wait, doesn't Windows rotate single thread workloads among cores?You don't think that > 10 W in one core might cause thermal throttling because < 30 W across 12 cores doesn't thermal throttle? You realize that is a very large jump in power density right? It could easily be hot spot temp causing the throttling. . .
So Apple is more cache to make up for the frequency difference and AMD using higher frequency but using less cache?
Obviously there is a power consumption difference in ST when boosting to 5.7GHz vs 3.5GHz. It’s all design trade off, AMD can spam more cores (useful for server) because they use less area and Apple can reach excellent 1t performance in a phone or tablet due to their design. I see why each approach makes sense.
It would be interesting to compare Intel cores as well once they get to a proper node.
Wait, doesn't Windows rotate single thread workloads among cores?
On Linux I don't think I ever encountered an issue like this, every 10 seconds or so a thread is passed to a different core, at least according to my system monitor.
Perhaps the Asus laptop is doing something like this but not all cores can reach 5.1GHz?