e2ekiel009
New Member
I am a huge noob and I am just wondering, what makes a fx-55 so much better than say a leading P4 processor?
Thanks!
Thanks!

Power consumption?? Do you mean delivered processing power?If you count the costs of the extremly high power consumption
What are you talking about?
AMD FX-55 : Thermal design power = 105 WIf you count the costs of the extremly high power consumption of the Pentium processor
Thermal Design Power isn't how much power the CPU consumes, it is the maximum power rating the heatsink must be able to dissipateAMD FX-55 : Thermal design power = 105 W
Intel 3.60 GHz + : Thermal design power = 115 W
The actual power consumption by the Athlon 64/P4 are as follows:Intel said:Thermal Design Power (TDP) represents the maximum amount of power the thermal solution is required to dissipate. The thermal solution should be designed to dissipate the TDP without exceeding the maximum Tjunction specification. TDP does not represent the power delivery and voltage regulation requirements for the processor.
Processor power dissipation simulations indicate a maximum application power in the range of 75% of the maximum power for a given frequency. Therefore, a system designed to the thermal design point, which has been set to approximately 75% of the maximum processor power would be unlikely to see the thermal control circuit active and experience the associated performance reduction.
Yes, I realize that, didn't really feel like looking at benchmarks. I guess my question then would be where is that 210 W of power going if not out the heat sink? Is that the power the whole system (including chipset, drives, etc... I know the headings say system) requires? Probably a moot point, but I don't see how the power consumption of the CPUs can be much different is their thermal design powers are similar.Thermal Design Power isn't how much power the CPU consumes, it is the maximum power rating the heatsink must be able to dissipate