AM2 Overclocking vs. Socket 939 Overclocking

Comments are often made that any evaluation of AM2 should include overclocking. Those theorists argue that the faster processor clock will move AM2 to the higher "bus" speeds that make for better efficiencies of the DDR2 memory controller - or something along those lines. With the current state of pre-release motherboards and AM2 processors, it just isn't possible to design a test that runs the AM2 at the 666 processor clock as we would like - the hardware is just not there yet. However, we were able to overclock the CPU almost 40% and finally settled on a workable overclock of the AM2, 939, OCZ DDR2-1000, and Crucial Ballistix DDR500.

The DDR2 memory was perfectly stable at a 250x10 processor setting with a DDR2-667 strap. This results (5:3 ratio) in a DDR2-833 memory speed at 3-3-3-10 timings on an equivalent 2.5GHz x2 AM2 CPU. Similarly the Crucial Ballistix was able to run with stability at 250x10 on a downclocked FX60 x2. With 1:1 ratio this resulted in memory at DDR500 3-3-3-7 timings.

The DDR results are in the general ball park of overclocking that would yield the best bandwidth, as is the AM2 overclocking. Both test setups are running at speeds an Enthusiast might run on an overclock with air. We are thus comparing a fast DDR overclock to a fast DDR2 overclock, within each architecture's capability. We are also running the same memory timings, though the DDR2-800 is running at a faster, but typical, speed for DDR2 on the upcoming AM2 and Conroe processors.



The overclocked test results are very interesting. Comparing DDR500 3-3-3 to DDR2-833 3-3-3 reveals an even greater improvement in latency and bandwidth for the DDR2 than we saw comparing DDR2-800 3-3-3 to DDR400 2-2-2. This is really an unexpected result. DDR2-800 latency is now down to 43.2 and Everest bandwidth increases to 8.8GB/s. DDR2 bandwidth is now 8% to 29% better than the similarly overclocked DDR setup compared to a range of 6.5% to 28.6% on the stock testing. The biggest improvement in the overclocking is Reads, which increase 29% overclocked compared to a 13.3% improvement at stock.

You might expect with an even greater improvement in memory bandwidth, in particular READ speeds, and Latency that a similar improvement in gaming performance would occur. Unfortunately that does not happen, as gaming performance improvements are even less than our stock comparisons. Once again, higher memory bandwidth and lower latency of DDR2 on AM2 just do not translate into markedly improved gaming performance.

Hopefully, this last series of overclocked performance comparisons will finally put into perspective what is and is not possible with improved DDR2 memory performance. Clearly AM2 will launch a bit faster than current Socket 939 performance when comparing the same processor speed. However it is not likely that further increases in DDR2 bandwidth or latency will translate into further improvements in performance with the current AMD/Athlon64 architecture. Further improvements in AM2 performance will have to come with revisions to the core, more cores, die-shrinks and higher speeds, and increases in cache. The move to DDR2 will bring small improvements in performance, but DDR2 alone is not likely to bring the large performance boosts many hope for.

Comparing Gaming Performance Comparing Overclocked Memory Performance
Comments Locked

37 Comments

View All Comments

  • Ecmaster76 - Saturday, April 15, 2006 - link

    Wouldn't it be the best way to suck up bandwidth? We already knew a single core had enough bandwidth from the 754-939 transition.

    I guess its not that big a deal now because the parts aren't even for sale. But as long as you do tsome multitasking articles on the final hardware I'll be happy.
  • IntelUser2000 - Saturday, April 15, 2006 - link

    So... the conclusion is that DDR2-800 is needed to outperform DDR400. DDR2-667 is slower than DDR400. The Inquirer is correct, contrary to some other opinions.
  • Wesley Fink - Saturday, April 15, 2006 - link

    Latency and Bandwidth of DDR2-533 are about the same as DDR400, and DDR2-667 and DDR2-800 are both faster. Games and Applications SHOULD be faster on both DDR2-667 and DDR2-800. However, given current aopplications and the AM2 memory controller, the applications and games are about the same at DDR2-667 - and DDR2-800 is faster as you state.

    This is likely the result of the late pre-release AM2 memory controller and applications/games themselves not being optimized for DDR2 on AM2. Both will likely be fixed very quickly, and actual performance of DDR2-533 should then be roughly on par with DDR400 - with 667 and 800 both faster.
  • psychobriggsy - Saturday, April 15, 2006 - link

    If 2.5GHz was a 40% overclock, then the AM2 processor tested must have been running at 1.8GHz (9x200, i.e., it was also unlocked for you to get 10x250).

    It's not surprising that a 1.8GHz K8 processor wouldn't benefit from DDR2 much - indeed I expect that most of the application improvements were just from the slightly reduced latency at DDR2-800 rather than actually having more bandwidth available.

    I wonder what a stock 2.8GHz AM2 X2 with DDR2-800 would get against a stock 2.8GHz 939 X2 with DDR-400? No, I don't think it will be a miracle, but just possibly it will start actually needing the extra bandwidth available, which could lead to a greater gap between the two platforms.

    I guess we'll find out in under 2 months.
  • Wesley Fink - Saturday, April 15, 2006 - link

    The AM2 processor was NOT a 1.8GHz x2. I stated the CPU could overclock 40% at stock speeds, but the 10x250 is not that 40% overclcok. We chose that ratio because it is a clock speed our DDR2 memory could handle and it was also a speed doable on 939 for a reasonable comparison. We actually had two AM2 processors this round, a top-line AM2 and a more mainstream processor. We looked at performance from both, and it was the same at the same processor speed. The DDR2 memory controller reports as Rev. F.

    As for the question about manufacture date, we are providing as little information about these pre-release processors and motherboards as possible to protect our sources. We have several sources who work with us to bring you the latest news before anyone else, and we don't want to compromise those relationships. Therefore we are not providing any information that might make it easier for AMD and others to trace our sources.

    We can assure you these are the latest Rev. AM2 shipped to AMD partners in early April as we have evaluated 4 versions since mid-January. This is also the first rev. to fully support DDR2-800.
  • Viditor - Saturday, April 15, 2006 - link

    quote:

    we are providing as little information about these pre-release processors and motherboards as possible to protect our sources

    Fair enough...had to ask.
  • Viditor - Saturday, April 15, 2006 - link

    My concern is that while Anand is just receiving the part, if it's off of a recent production run then AMD will have some problems with the launch. Usually you need a full turn's worth of product in inventory for a launch...if they are just turning out final product now, then my guess is there will be shortages come July. Of course since they have doubled their capacity recently it will be much less, but still...it doesn't bode well.

    Anand, could you confirm the manufacture date of the chip you tested for us please?
  • Viditor - Saturday, April 15, 2006 - link

    Apologies...I should have addressed the previous question to Wesley (sorry mate).
    I know that APM allows AMD to change anything (even down to individual dice on the wafer) at any point in the process, but my concern is inventory levels here. If you could please confirm the production date on the chip you used for testing, it would help me significantly with my analysis of the upcoming launch.

    Cheers!
  • Jynx980 - Saturday, April 15, 2006 - link

    Typo on page 3, paragraph 5:
    quote:

    we DDR timings we have tested
  • Wesley Fink - Saturday, April 15, 2006 - link

    The extra "we" has been removed.

Log in

Don't have an account? Sign up now