Friday, September 28th 2012
AMD A10-5800K Capable of 6.50 GHz over LN2: Company
AMD's new A10-5800K "Trinity" APUs, launched earlier this week, are capable of extreme overclocking, something similarly-priced Intel processors can't claim, according to Adam Kozak, desktop products manager with the company. According to Kozak, the roughly $150 A10-5800K are capable of 6.50 GHz overclocked speeds, when augmented with liquid nitrogen cooling.
Overclocking capabilities give AMD's sub-$150 chips such as the A10-5800K, A8-5600K, and A6-5400K an edge over similarly-priced Intel chips. The cheapest overclockable chip from Intel's current lineup is the $220 Core i5-2500K. Based on the "Trinity" silicon, the A10-5800K ships with clock speeds of 3.80 GHz, which go up to 4.20 GHz with TurboCore. The chip features an unlocked base clock multiplier, which makes overclocking possible.
Source:
TechWorld.com.au
Overclocking capabilities give AMD's sub-$150 chips such as the A10-5800K, A8-5600K, and A6-5400K an edge over similarly-priced Intel chips. The cheapest overclockable chip from Intel's current lineup is the $220 Core i5-2500K. Based on the "Trinity" silicon, the A10-5800K ships with clock speeds of 3.80 GHz, which go up to 4.20 GHz with TurboCore. The chip features an unlocked base clock multiplier, which makes overclocking possible.
157 Comments on AMD A10-5800K Capable of 6.50 GHz over LN2: Company
Intel has 10x the resources and they promote their processors with unstable LN2 overclocks too but nobody says nothing.
Its a good thing intel has competition from amd, otherwise we would be paying possibly a lot more for intel chips? [Does that make sense?]
Also, what is up with people on AMD about bad PR?
Proof then as if it were required that this Pr bumph has a point ,the same point the article mentions YOU CAN OC THESE QUITE WELL, yeh its in big but needs some highlighting for some to understand, why people have to have a dig all the time at AMd without really even haveing a reason/point is starting to get annoying and tiresome.:shadedshu
eg :wtf:
your comments bad and you should feel bad about it, its an opinion without any actual point ie why in your opinion was this bad PR anyways(no i dont actually want to know but if your going to post at least bother with an actual reason)
Fish and chips are great, but apples and pairs are horrid:wtf:
EDIT: AWW the love/Hate relationship with me and AMD.. hehehe Tell me again how much better your product is on paper than theres?..hehehe
If this is every core overclocking on even LN2 then this is pretty damn AMAZING! Everyone has to take into account that most CPU overclocker's who break the world record are only oc'ing one core! To see this core break the 6.5ghz mark on all four cores within the boundries of LN2 would be a record within itself!
Instead of using Intel's compilers and libraries, give AMD's a try: developer.amd.com/TOOLS/CPU/Pages/default.aspx
Oh wait, they're only for Linux. Doh!
After that being said, I will probably pick the 5800K up for a HTPC.
With Trinity in particular the overclocking is almost irrelevant since it is primarily going to be an entry level CPU/GPU setup for budget gamers and a good alternative for HTPC's. Neither are categories of people that would want to be running extreme overclocks. There's also the fact that since the fiasco that was Netburst, people aren't fooled by high clock rates if the performance isn't there. Netburst really proved that just because you have a CPU running at double the clock rate of your competitor, it doesn't always make it better.
How much slower do you think 25.35 + 32.55 runs than 2535 + 3255? The only time that turns into a FP number is when the user sees it. Otherwise multiplying a integer will be fast since all you have to do is shift the bits and maybe add a single number.
EDIT: AND before AMD people go crazy.. hehehe I'm not calling AMD shit.. Again I like/love AMD's products... :toast: