Media Encoding Performance & Power Consumption

The absolute performance crown under our WME test continues to belong to the E6600, followed by the X2 5000+, but after that it's a fairly close race between the contenders. The E6400 and X2 4800+ are basically equal in performance, with the 4600+ following closely. At the low end of the spectrum, the E6300 outperforms the X2 3800+ but albeit with much higher power consumption.

If we look at absolute power consumption, the X2 3800+ EE SFF can't be beat. Although it's outperformed by every other chip in the test, it consumes at least 20 fewer watts during the benchmark. Power consumption for the rest of the chips is basically equal, with the 90nm X2 5000+ sticking out as the only sore thumb.

Our E6300 sample's combination of high operating voltage and low performance relative to the competition results in it having the worst performance per watt out of the group. The X2 3800+ SFF comes in second to last in this metric due to its lower performance. Meanwhile, the E6600 places first, the 65nm X2 5000+ is in second place, closely followed by Intel's Core 2 Duo E6400 and the 65nm X2 4800+.

Windows Media Encoder Advanced Profile Performance

Windows Media Encoder Power Usage

Windows Media Encoder Performance per Watt

DivX performance favors Intel much more than our WME test, as the top three performance spots go to Intel. There's no performance difference between AMD's 90nm and 65nm chips in this test as both 5000+ CPUs are tied at 6.66 fps.

The absolute power advantage goes, once again, to the X2 3800+ EE SFF. Our 65nm 4800+ sample draws a bit less power than the 5000+ and even manages to draw less than the 90nm 4600+ EE. Unfortunately with no great power advantages and mid-range performance, the top three in the performance per watt category belong to Intel.

DivX 6.4 with Xmpeg 5.0.3 Performance

DivX 6.4 with Xmpeg 5.0.3 Power Usage

DivX 6.4 with Xmpeg 5.0.3 Performance per Watt

The Test Media Encoding Performance & Power Consumption - Continued
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  • Schugy - Thursday, December 21, 2006 - link

    Being able to sell more chips is not an argument for consumers but for AMD. Brisbane is not like Prescott - AMD has done a good job. Further development is needed but first 65nm units are running and are the basis for new architectures with increased transistor count.
  • Yoshi911 - Thursday, December 21, 2006 - link

    Hey all, I know that Socket 939 is obselete now but I think It'd be awesome if they'd make a 939 65nm core.. I still have my Opteron 144 at 3.1ghz on my Lanparty board and would love to see a core I could update to before the nextgen AMD achatecture makes it out.

    Anyone know if this is a possibilty??
  • Spoelie - Thursday, December 21, 2006 - link

    get a 165 for 150$, overclock it to at least 2.8ghz and you have fx62 like performance

    that's the best thing you will ever get on socket 939 I'm afraid, now and in the future.
  • peldor - Thursday, December 21, 2006 - link

    Practically, it's never gonna happen. The market wouldn't be worth the effort.
  • OcHungry - Thursday, December 21, 2006 - link

    I don’t understand why anyone or any review expect stellar overclocking or performance from these 65nm’s?
    Did AMD promise any? No. AMD promised a transition to 65nm and on time. That’s what we all should expect and appreciate the successful transition.
    Do you remember the first batch of Intel's 65nm Core 2’s? It was not as good as what you see today. Frankly I think AMD did much better in 65nm than Intel back then, and this first release is giving Core 2 due's matured chip a run for the money. After all the review here clearly shows AMD is on tract w/ 65nm’s performance per watt and energy consumption. Don’t forget its still K8 architecture competing w/ the latest and the greatest of Intel's.
  • IntelUser2000 - Thursday, December 21, 2006 - link

    quote:

    Do you remember the first batch of Intel's 65nm Core 2’s? It was not as good as what you see today. Frankly I think AMD did much better in 65nm than Intel back then, and this first release is giving Core 2 due's matured chip a run for the money. After all the review here clearly shows AMD is on tract w/ 65nm’s performance per watt and energy consumption. Don’t forget its still K8 architecture competing w/ the latest and the greatest of Intel's.


    Which first batches?? The ones XS has been receiving far before the official Core 2 Duo release?? What's the OC that AT got??

    http://www.anandtech.com/cpuchipsets/showdoc.aspx?...">http://www.anandtech.com/cpuchipsets/showdoc.aspx?...

    X6800 went from 2.93GHz to 3.6GHz with default voltage. On a very good air cooler and voltage increased, it reached 4.0GHz.

    E6700: 2.667GHz to 3.4 default, 3.9 highest
    E6600: 4.0GHz highest
    X6800 stock cooler highest: 3.4GHz
    Tomshardware: X6800 to 3.46GHz
    Xbitlabs: X6800 to 3.4GHz, 3.6GHz with +voltage

    Brisbane 5000+
    2.6GHz to 2.925GHz, on stock cooler, 1.475V.

    It's not that bad for Brisbane IMO. It seems more like an architectural limitation than process or thermal limitation. Core 2 Duo still has ways to go and roadmaps sort of reflect it. Though the increase in L2 access latencies may mean it was done to increase the clock speed potential.
  • peldor - Thursday, December 21, 2006 - link

    Going to 65nm shouldn't move you backwards in performance though. There's no excuse for that from the consumer's POV unless the price also goes down (certainly a possibility if yields are good).
  • ydoucensor - Thursday, December 21, 2006 - link

    could the increase in latencies have something to do with "trusted" computing and the need for attestation?
  • fitten - Thursday, December 21, 2006 - link

    Pure speculation, but the L2 latency increase may be a result of work going into the three level cache controller logic getting ready for K8L or whatever it's going to be.
  • mino - Thursday, December 21, 2006 - link

    My thoughts exactly.

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