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 AMD Phenom II X4 920 and 940 review test

 By: Hilbert Hagedoorn | Edited by John A. Johnsen, Joshua Finger, Ian R. Barling | Published: January 8, 2009  

   


The "Dragon" platform.

As stated in our introduction, a name you'll hear quite a lot this week is "Dragon". When AMD launched the Phenom processors, they did so under codename "Spider". Spider entailed the AMD 780 chipset, Radeon series 3000/4000 and obviously the B3 generation Phenom processors.

Spiders in the end get squashed or tangled in their own webs, and today we'll see if that will happen, making the Spider platform obolete that is. Codename Dragon is the infrastructure that is the AMD 790GX/FX chipset, Radeon 4000 series graphics cards and thus the new Phenom II series processors. AMD will release it under the motto "state of the art technology and performance, without breaking the bank".

AMD Phenom II X4 920 and 940 test
Gigabyte GA-MA790GP-DS4H with a Phenom II X4 940 processor seated

The Phenom II processors

AMD Phenom II X4 920 and 940 testToday is all about the two processors being released. AMD made a move to their all new 45nm node to manufacture the Phenom II processors. What does that mean? When you look at this from a distance it pretty much means that they were able to make this processor smaller compared to the last gen products. And that has advantages, often to be found in lower voltages and higher clock frequencies. Next to that, with technology updates like these they also fix the smaller bugs the last-gen products had. ANY processors has small bugs.

To understand Phenom II, let's look at a last-gen Phenom processor.

The current Phenom X4 processor family on B3 stepping includes models like: 9550, 9650, 9750, 9850 and 9950 (Black Editions). AMD also introduced without much success I must say, their triple-core processors known as Toliman which we recently reviewed. People just simply will not buy the processor based on a stigma ... three cores sound weird, plain and simple.

So the previously leading flagship processor was the Phenom X4 9950 BE which runs at a 2.6 GHz clock frequency at a full 2.0 GHz HT 3.0 speed with a 1.2-1.3V voltage and 140W TDP.

This part is based on AMD's 65nm Silicon on Insulator process technology. The voltage on the Phenom X4 9950 is listed as 1.05-1.30 Volts, and the lower specced Phenom X4 9850 and slower CPUs were at 1.2-1.3 Volts. Phenom X4 9950 features a total 2MB L2 cache; 512KB per core. This Phenom X4 can address 2MB L3 cache as buffer where it can also exchange data in-between the cores.

So that gave the four cores a total of 4MB of cache (that's excluding a little L1 cache). The die size of that CPU is 285 mm² and for whatever reason we always like to know the CPU has 450 million transistors.

And now Phenom II ....

The new flagship product will be the Phenom II X4 940, this processor will run at 3.0 GHz. The Phenom 920 will run at a respectable 2.8 GHz at a full 2.0 GHz HT 3.0 speed at a 0.875 to -1.5V voltage and has a 125W TDP (peak wattage).

The Phenom II parts as explain are based on AMD's 45nm Silicon on Insulator process technology. Phenom II X4 940 and 920 features a total 2MB L2 cache; 512KB per core. A big change is the increase in L3 cache. Phenom II can address 6MB L3 cache shared among cores as buffer. So is can exchange data in-between the four logical cores.

AMD Phenom II X4 920 and 940 test
AMD Phenom II X4 die





 

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