Tuesday, April 30th 2013
AMD Intros FX-6350 and FX-4350 Desktop Processors to the Retail Channel
AMD introduced two additions to its FX line of socket AM3+ processors, the six-core FX-6350, and the quad-core FX-4350. The two were released as OEM-only parts, late last year, and are now being released to the retail channel, in PIB (processor-in-box) packages. Based on the 32 nm "Vishera" silicon and "Piledriver" micro-architecture, the two chips are designed to hold two extremely catchy sub-$150 price-points.
The FX-6350 features a nominal core clock speed of 3.90 GHz, a maximum Turbo Core frequency of 4.20 GHz, 6 MB of total L2 cache, and 8 MB L3 cache. The FX-4350, on the other hand, features 4.20 GHz clock speed, with 4.30 GHz Turbo Core, 4 MB of total L2 cache, and 8 MB of L3. Both parts feature unlocked base-clock multipliers, modern instruction-sets such as AVX, AES-NI, SSE4.2, SSE4.1, FMA2, and XOP. Both further have TDP rated at 125W. The FX-6350 retail PIB package will be priced as low as US $132, while the FX-4350 will go for as low as $122. The two will also ship with AMD's newest case-badge design, pictured below.
The FX-6350 features a nominal core clock speed of 3.90 GHz, a maximum Turbo Core frequency of 4.20 GHz, 6 MB of total L2 cache, and 8 MB L3 cache. The FX-4350, on the other hand, features 4.20 GHz clock speed, with 4.30 GHz Turbo Core, 4 MB of total L2 cache, and 8 MB of L3. Both parts feature unlocked base-clock multipliers, modern instruction-sets such as AVX, AES-NI, SSE4.2, SSE4.1, FMA2, and XOP. Both further have TDP rated at 125W. The FX-6350 retail PIB package will be priced as low as US $132, while the FX-4350 will go for as low as $122. The two will also ship with AMD's newest case-badge design, pictured below.
24 Comments on AMD Intros FX-6350 and FX-4350 Desktop Processors to the Retail Channel
I'll buy it, if at least equal with x6 1090T or better.
Happy reading www.guru3d.com/articles_pages/amd_fx_8350_8320_6300_processor_4300_performance_review,2.html
Bulldozer and Vishera continue to remind me of when Intel was struggling to compete with the inefficient, high-clocked P4 against AMD's more efficient, low-clocked Athlon 64. Unfortunately for AMD, most people rarely if ever use their computer for anything that really taxes the CPU, besides gaming.
Pretty much all the FX lineup can already reach 5Ghz or near on air too.
There's far more performance in software than there will ever be in hardware. (yeah, I'm a broken record, but worth repeating, and AMD hasn't been trying until recently on the software)
For example, the Athlon 6400+ didn't really overclock any higher than the Athlon 5***, and the Phenom II 980 didn't really clock much higher than any other Black Edition Phenom II X4.
every 4100 user was gutted when they brought out the 4130 or was it 4170 (im losing track lol), which performed better for the near same price.
i think its the same for 6 series.
just give me sex, sorry thats my GF! Give me new steamroller..........
All the chips made idealy nead selling so what gives ....
how about the wattage, does it good too?
thanx mate :toast:
---------------
i'm waiting amd's steamroller chip :)
The FX6350 or the older 6300 I must admit are a very all round great performance per dollar CPU. I build PC's for clients with i5's in them and that's classed as high performance but if i can get the same but for less that's a win win for me ;)
Pretty much the reason Trinity can be beaten by Llano in some areas. Llano was based on old Athlon IIs and Trinity is Piledriver. Not only is IPC worse but that same issue gets carried over because Trinity is only quads. Plus APUs lack L3 which hurts them more. Now if they ever released an 8 core APU...that might be something.
Course we'll be seeing 8 core APUs in the PS4 coming up.
www.aria.co.uk/SuperSpecials/Other+products/AMD+%28Piledriver%29+FX-6300+3.50GHz+%284.10GHz+Turbo%29+Socket+AM3%2B+6-Core+Processor+-+Retail+?productId=52724
IMHO, all in all, if everything goes well, I expect AMD to unite it's APU and FX platforms into one... and possibly phase out non-APU chips altogether... but that's probably circa the time of Excavator/2015/20nm or lower...
I wonder if TDP affects the overclock of a chip too.