Wednesday, August 17th 2011
AMD Releases A6-3500 Triple-Core APU
AMD released its first triple-core accelerated processing unit (APU), the A6-3500. Armed with three x86-64 cores, the A6-3500 socket FM1 APU is positioned to offer superior performance and performance per dollar compared to Intel's Sandy Bridge-based Pentium Dual Core processors. The A6-3500 features Radeon HD 6530D graphics, which is DirectX 11 compliant, and makes use of 320 stream processors. The CPU component of the A6-3500 is clocked at 2.10 GHz with 2.40 GHz in TurboCore mode, while the GPU component runs at 443 MHz.
There is 3 MB of L2 cache on the chip (1 MB per core), the dual-channel DDR3 memory controller natively supports DDR3-1866 MHz memory. The TDP of the chip is rated at 65W. AMD's A6-3500 triple-core APU is priced at US $95 in the PIB (processor in box) retail package, which includes the certified heatsink, while in 1000-unit tray quantities, it is priced at $89 a piece.
There is 3 MB of L2 cache on the chip (1 MB per core), the dual-channel DDR3 memory controller natively supports DDR3-1866 MHz memory. The TDP of the chip is rated at 65W. AMD's A6-3500 triple-core APU is priced at US $95 in the PIB (processor in box) retail package, which includes the certified heatsink, while in 1000-unit tray quantities, it is priced at $89 a piece.
19 Comments on AMD Releases A6-3500 Triple-Core APU
it opens up performance by around 30-35% over 1066,
and when the CPU is overclocked it overclocks the GPU as well,
at full overclock an APU performs roughly on par with in this case an Athlon II X3 440 + 8800gs
still more then enough for gaming on todays console ports. surprisingly enough.
not bad considering the price.plus you get a decent gpu which is good enough for gaming at low-medium setting.
And just like you mentioned, some of us might get lucky with an unlock ;)
stock its slow yes
but going from 1066mhz DDR3 to 1866 offers a 25% or more performance boost
overclocking the core also can offer another 15-20% in which case the APU
which offers CPU + GPU for $140 give the same performance as a Phenom II 955 + 8800gs / 8800gt.
the High End APU with decent RAM kit has performance favorable to a 3850 which is in between 8800gs and 8800gt performance
even with the cheapest intel dual core + gt 240 you still wont get performance at the same price as the APU at $130
In far cry 2 which was never really a Pro AMD title an APU for $130 overclocked offers performance between a 5670 / 5770
a Athlon II x4 + 5670 will cost you $170 ish so yea... obviously its performance is there in the APU's just have to overclock to get it,
and the APU is much like sandybridge in that they pretty much all hit the same wall due to the clockspeed increase overclocking both cpu + gpu,
so by cross referencing reviews around the web it would indeed appear that an overclocked APU system offers Phenom II 955 / Q9550 cpu performance + 8800gt performance. for $130 thats good bang for buck on the 3850
the 3500 APU should come in around 8800gs performance other gpus of similar performance lvl
8800gs 9600gt 9600gso
4670
stock clocks yea there not much to right home about but considering im looking at this from a techpowerup! user perspective, the cost of an APU is pretty good when comparing the cost of a seperate cpu + gpu when overclocking the APU,
Also the Athlon II X3 chips are at least $70. And the closest 6000 series card to that price range is around $50. Unless you want to sacrifice efficiency or deal with the 210 lack luster HD playback support.
the APU definitely isnt end all be all but for moron users that know next to nothing, they can do far worse then an APU lol if they want to play there facebook games, watch hd video, and play WoW lol
I'm working on more APU board reviews, and a couple of Z68 reviews. At the desktop, when paired with a SSD, the APU isn't really that slow...at all...would be hardpressed to really notice that perhaps the APU doesn't have the best CPU performance, but for it's cost, you've gotta expect that.
Would I recommend gaming with this A6-3500? Yes, if the games were DX9c titles. You want to play Valve games, Indie titles, Fallout New Vegas, Mass Effect 2, Dragon Age Origin/Awakening, Resident Evil 5, etc. it will handle those on medium to max settings no prob.
I played through Mass Effect 2 on the A6-3650 @ maxed out settings with no stutter, lag, or severe frame rate drops. While it was only 48 FPS average, it never dropped below 40 so gameplay was smooth.
If you plan to play Bad Company 2, yet to be released titles, any DX11 game, etc. then why are you even shopping in the below $100 price segment? The CPU alone should be no less than $140 (discounted AMD Phenom II) if you plan to plan that stuff.
also where do you get those phenom II X4 955/ Intel Q9550? i cant find it at any benchmark that you shown above. except core2duo E6850.. but i never said it was bad choice either.. comparing $90 A3500 with $120 system, it looks very clear..
Socket FM1 allows 1866 as the default same as Bulldozer on AM3+
$50 for 4gb of 1866mhz ram
G.SKILL Ripjaws X Series 4GB (2 x 2GB) 240-Pin DDR...
so really ram cost is moot,
i mean for christ sake just 2 weeks ago Mushkin Redlines 1866mhz 9 10 9 1.5v that will do 2133mhz and an 8gb kit no less was $80 so cost of ram is a non issue 1866 4gb kit use to be expensive theyve now dropped to the same cost as 1333mhz sticks 2 months ago.
8 gig 1866mhz with low profile heatspreaders
Mushkin Enhanced Redline 8GB (2 x 4GB) 240-Pin DDR...