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
Nobody say's nothing in articles regarding VIA while them too,boasting their capabilities. and yet people still whining about lack of PCIe 3.0 and 16x16x bandwidth :p
PS:thanks for invitation :toast:
If that's true, why do I never hear about this from Intel PR; while every time AMD releases a new CPU, they claim it overclocks like a demon on LN2?
Maybe it's because - once again - the CPU part of their APU, aka the most important part, isn't competitive and they're frantically trying to distract people from this fact?
Just throwing that out there... use it, don't use it...
So @ 6.5 GHz with LN2 Trinity is Cinebench R11.5 benchable?
More CPU benches are needed to make a proper judgment on this but it sure does look good.
you can see here if they haven't changed the slides...
www.msi.com/product/mb/#/?sk=Socket%202011%20(Intel%20i7)
www.asus.com/Motherboards/Intel_Socket_1155/Intel_Z77
www.asrock.com/microsite/OCFormula/
they bashing each other claiming can reach 7 Ghz.it is good for them or good for intel?
CPU might important,but not the most.on to question,which software or games that any mediocre quad-core can't handle?if you have an opt,what would you like to choose,upgrade to i7 3770k or GTX 660Ti?
let just leave PR be,it's their job :)
AMD plans to introduce 10 GHz chips by 2016.
Edit: Added 1 year to be super accurate.
Have the CPU do serial tasks efficiently.
Have the GPU do parallel tasks efficiently.
The idea is to place parallel tasks on the GPU because they work great on parallel tasks. While placing serial tasks on the CPUs because they work great on serial tasks.
A10-5800K FP SP GFlops: 4 Cores * 8 Flops * 3.8 GHz = 121.6 FMA SP GFlops
7660D FP SP GFlops: 6 Cores * 128 Flops * 0.8 GHz = 614.4 FMA SP GFlops
good lord they think they would have learned from bulldozer
moar clock speed != MOAR performance
the only thing moar clock speed grants you is higher power consumption and heat
the reason we see AMD driving to push the clock speeds up is they they fired all the engineers that told them otherwise .... and they now lack the talent to design efficient chips they are so far in the hole that its gonna take one or two more generations for them to climb back-out for all of AMD's pr bullshit we have yet to see ONE CHIP from them that lived up to expectations
\
bottem line is when there top end part is getting soundly beaten by offerings from intel that are only ~25-50 bucks more
the people that are looking for performance tend to look REALLY hard at there wallets.
if I went out and built another pc today and was gonna spend >600 bucks. it would be intel because I know in ~4 years that THAT 3750k I bought today will still be-able to offer good (gaming)performance. with amd its a crap shoot if you don't believe me pull of some benchmarks of a Q8400 Vrs a Phenom II 940 yes most titles are very playable and there is less then a 20Fps difference but 20Fps can make the difference between playable and a slideshow ...
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I used to be a AMD guy like you but then .... I got a 2500k ..... and a wakeup call
The GPU is only a 7660D, not powerful at all. People are running slower Athlon IIs and Phenom IIs and Bulldozers on faster dedicated GPUs and they are not being bottlenecked.
VERSUS
And these are just some random pics I picked up to exemplify with.
Yeah, sure looks like all those extra 128 graphics cores (and MHz) are being fully tapped out in most cases. :rollseyes:
We've seen situations with dedicated video cards where increasing the shader count doesn't scale e.g. the 9800GT and 9800GTX or the 4830 and 4850. Similar performance despite the increased shader count. But back in 2009 nobody said CPU bottleneck we just excepted scaling isnt linear.