Intel's Core 2 E4000 and Pentium E2000

Intel has two processor lines that compete in the mainstream space, both based on its famed Core 2 micro-architecture: the Core 2 Duo E4000 series and the Pentium Dual Core E2000 series.

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The chart below explains the differences between these two processors and the Core 2 Duo E6000 chips we normally review:

Intel CPU Features Overview
  Pentium E2000 Core 2 Duo E4000 Core 2 Duo E6000
Number of Cores 2 2 2
L2 Cache Size 1MB 2MB 4MB
FSB 800MHz 800MHz 1066MHz+
Intel VT No No Yes
Intel TXT No No Yes
Intel EIST Yes Yes Yes
Intel 64-bit Yes Yes Yes
Intel Execute Disable Bit Yes Yes Yes

As you can see, the main differences between the chips are L2 cache size and FSB, although with the Pentium Dual Core and Core 2 E4000 chips you do lose out on Virtualization and Trusted Execution support, two features not widely used in the mainstream desktop market yet.


At the sacrifice of a larger cache and a couple of features, you get some very affordable CPUs based on Intel's strongest architecture to date. Buyers beware, however: the Pentium Dual Core processors are not the same thing as Intel's Pentium D processors; the former comes with model numbers like the rest of the Core 2 lineup (e.g. Pentium Dual Core E2160) while the Pentium D is NetBurst based and still uses the old Pentium 4 model numbers (e.g. Pentium D 945). We'd take the slowest Pentium Dual Core over the fastest available Pentium D, so stay away from the last remnants of the NetBurst architecture if you know what's best for you.

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  • Darth Farter - Friday, September 28, 2007 - link

    why not the cool & quiet idle power numbers?
    seeing they're running at full speeds at idle is besides the point of an "idle" measurement in this age with powersavings...

    tnx though on the bios update request from asus... I want to tweak my timings too.

  • Anand Lal Shimpi - Friday, September 28, 2007 - link

    C&Q and EIST were both enabled for the idle and load power numbers. Actually all the benchmarks were run with those settings enabled.

    Take care,
    Anand
  • archcommus - Friday, September 28, 2007 - link

    I realize the benchmarks are run at 1024x768 to make the tests CPU-limited, does that mean all, or at least most, of the extra horsepower needed for resolutions above that comes from the GPU? If so, does that mean I could run games at 1280x1024 well with a high-end card and one of the AMD CPUs from this round-up? Or would that be a bad match-up? If that would work it's an appealing upgrade path alternative to jumping platforms.
  • nosfe - Friday, September 28, 2007 - link

    why not color code those performance graphs so that we can easily see which processors are competing at the same price

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