Athlon 64

While the dual core processors are stealing the limelight, AMD's current generation Venice and San Diego (revision "E") processors continue to drop in price since our last guide. The prices of these units have finally dropped below their older 130nm Hammer, Newcastle, and Winchester counterparts. One particularly interesting chip we would like to showcase is the "E6" Venice [RTPE: Venice E6]. These Venice chips have the same memory controller as the dual core Manchester and Toledo chips, and thus they support AMD's new memory divider. Since there is virtually no premium on the E6 Venice chips, the new memory controller might be worth reading up about.

Since our last guide, there have been some significant price drops. Check out how the Athlon 64 San Diego 3700+ [RTPE: ADA3700BNBOX] has performed over the last few weeks:

AMD Athlon 64 (939) 3700+ 1MB San Diego

The Athlon 64 San Diego 3700+ processor caught our eye this week at only $255. Although prices on the 3800+ continue to plateau, the 4000+ is beginning to drop to more reasonable prices.

We continue to recommend against anyone buying a Socket 754 computer, unless you plan on putting one of those fairly powerful Sempron chips inside. The Socket 939 easily outclasses the Socket 754 offerings, however if you're looking to build a decent budget PC or upgrade an older machine, 754 may be the way to go. Below is a listing of our Socket 754 Athlon prices; we strongly suggest going with a Socket 939 motherboard and CPU instead.

Index Sempron & Turion
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  • highlandsun - Tuesday, September 6, 2005 - link

    I suppose; for noobs it would just mean they can spread viruses/worms twice as fast.

    The turbo analogy is good, you've hit another topic near and dear to my heart. :P
    (Of course with a properly sized turbo, "lag" is mostly a non-issue.)
  • Chapbass - Sunday, September 4, 2005 - link

    lol, im assuming you mean dual core...your topic said dual but the post said single... : )

    As of right now the big push for dual core is for those (like myself) that multitask alot. Yeah, its not a good idea to multitask while gaming and such, but it would be nice to be able to do whatever while im say, burning a dvd with dvdshrink. Or i suppose (depending on how powerful they are, as i dont own one) I could actually probably game while burning a dvd... who knows maybe someone with a dual core can chime in.

    I'm sure that once the big name companies start pushing it then software companies will start coding for it.
  • Bona Fide - Sunday, September 4, 2005 - link

    Well, a lot of workstation applications already are SMP/SMT-aware, since most workstations are built off of Xeon or Opteron setups, which are usually dual or quad processor. Apps like Photoshop, CAD, and 3dStudioMAX all are optimized for dual-core. Here's a complete listing.

    http://www.denniskarlsson.com/smp/">http://www.denniskarlsson.com/smp/

    Does anyone think that AMD's dual-core offering will match up with Intel's any time soon, in terms of price?

    Athlon 64 X2 3800+ = $350
    Pentium D 820 2.8 = $250

    Athlon 64 X2 4200+ = $475
    Pentium D 830 3.0 = $350

    Athlon 64 X2 4600+ = $690
    Pentium D 840 3.4 = $540
  • Furen - Sunday, September 4, 2005 - link

    AMD's 3800+ is a match for the D 830 performance-wise, so the chart should be shifted like this:

    Pentium D 820 2.8 = $250
    Pentium D 830 3.0 = $350 Athlon 64 X2 3800+ = $350
    Pentium D 840 3.4 = $540 Athlon 64 X2 4200+ = $475
    Athlon 64 X2 4600+ = $690

    The problem with AMD (right now) is that they dont have a low speedgrade, and I'm sure this is a purely yield-related Issue. Intel can make cheap because they have much more capacity than AMD (something fab36 will hopefully help AMD deal with) and because they can just slice off a core if it turns out to be defective, effectively making their failed Dual-cores into single-core variants (this is because event hough the 2 cores are on the same die, they are simply side-by-side for the most part).
  • JarredWalton - Monday, September 5, 2005 - link

    Actually, you still don't have the price table correct.

    1.8 GHz 3000+ ~= Pentium 3.0 GHz
    2.0 GHz 3200+ ~= Pentium 3.2 GHz
    2.2 GHz 3500+ ~= Pentium 3.4 GHz
    2.2 GHz 1MB 3700+ ~= Pentium 3.6 GHz
    2.4 GHz 3800+ ~= Pentium 3.8 GHz

    (Yes, I AM fudging on what each CPU "equals". The fact of the matter is that in most instances, the 3000+ is actually faster than a 3.0 GHz P4, and that applies to the others as well.)

    So, 2x2.0GHz 3800+ is really equal to 2x3.2GHz Pentium D 840. There really is not Intel match for the 4200+ and above parts - the 4200+ is faster in almost every case than even the 840D Extreme Edition. (Tests under Windows XP with four CPU-intensive tasks will put the 840 EE ahead, but that's a Windows scheduler problem.)
  • joex444 - Tuesday, September 6, 2005 - link

    No, the 2x2.0GHz 3800+ is closest to an 830 (2x3.0GHz). The 840 is faster in most benchmarks.

    It's a little difficult to compare the two, really. The P4 was always faster than the Athlon (64) in certain apps, mainly encoding, while the Athlon was always faster in other things (like everything else, especially gaming). When you put two cores on one PCB, however, things can change. The Athlon X2's design is more advanced than Intel's. AMD really thought it out and made it backwards compatible with Socket 939, at the cost of memory bandwidth rather than invent a new socket. Intel instead requires a new motherboard that offers no real new features other than Pentium D support.

    Basically, if you already have a Socket 939 board, it would make more sense to grab an X2 as an upgrade rather than jump ship and go Pentium D. You have to add the cost of a motherboard, something that everyone buying a Pentium D needs, so Intel can offer the chip at a lower cost somewhat, because they are also selling a Northbridge/Southbridge (whatever they decided to call it, that's what they really are). They also put next to no tech design into the Pentium D, little research money comparitivley. They literally glued two cores together and changed the northbridge/BIOS to support the chips. The architecture map shows it, the two cores go through the FSB to talk to each other, just like in a dual Xeon system which has two independent sockets. AMD's cores don't hit the FSB to talk, which can help out in many situations. Unfortunately for AMD, Intel's 800MHz FSB is still fast enough to run two 3.0GHz chips fast enough to compete. If Intel only had DDR FSB (effectively a 400MHz bus) I don't think they could have come out with the Pentium D at the speeds they did. Fortunately for Intel, in their quest to produce the 3.8GHz chips, some fall short, way short, like 2.8 or 3.0, and when you pair them together, glue them together (we saw the IDF pic of a chip w/o it's heat speader) and call it a Pentium D, it works really well for them.

    If you had a P4 now, though, it probably makes more sense to get a Pentium D, unless you were looking for leading edge, in which case the 4600+/4800+ (if you just have to have 1MB L2 for each core) is your target.

    IDK where I'm going here, so...yea.

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