Power Consumption

Power consumption is very low thanks to core power gating and Intel's 32nm process. Also, when the integrated GPU is not in use it is completely power gated as to not waste any power either. The end result is lower power consumption than virtually any other platform out there under load.

Idle Power Consumption

Load Power Consumption

I also measured power at the ATX12V connector to give you an idea of what actual CPU power consumption is like (excluding the motherboard, PSU loss, etc...):

Processor Idle Load (Cinebench R11.5)
Intel Core i7 2600K @ 4.4GHz 5W 111W
Intel Core i7 2600K (3.4GHz) 5W 86W
AMD Phenom II X4 975 BE (3.6GHz) 14W 96W
AMD Phenom II X6 1100T (3.3GHz) 20W 109W
Intel Core i5 661 (3.33GHz) 4W 33W
Intel Core i7 880 (3.06GHz) 3W 106W

Idle power is a strength of Intel's as the cores are fully power gated when idle resulting in these great single digit power levels. Under load, there's actually not too much difference between an i7 2600K and a 3.6GHz Phenom II (only 10W). There's obviously a big difference in performance however (7.45 vs. 4.23 for the Phenom II in Cinebench R11.5), thus giving Intel better performance per watt. The fact that AMD is able to add two more cores at only a 13W load and 300MHz frequency penalty is pretty impressive as well.

Gaming Performance Final Words
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  • saikyan - Thursday, January 6, 2011 - link

    "perhaps we should return to just labeling these things with their clock speeds and core counts? After all, it’s what Apple does—and that’s a company that still refuses to put more than one button on its mice. Maybe it’s worth a try."

    I hate to sound like the resident Mac fanboy (I'm platform agnostic) but I want to point out:

    1. Apple sells by trim and display, they don't really make a big deal of the CPU (probably because they stick to low-end and midrange CPUs)

    2. They have been shipping multi-button mice for nearly six years now. Come on!
  • vol7ron - Friday, January 7, 2011 - link

    - gtx460 image quality definitely the worst
    - 6870 image quality next
    - quicksync/snb image quality are the best (marginally better than 6870); I did notice some color loss in the flowers behind the umbrella when I zoomed in on the quicksync picture, so I'd have to give SNB the title in terms of quality. QuickSync gets the title in terms of performance.
  • nitrousoxide - Monday, January 10, 2011 - link

    lmao
  • Burticus - Monday, January 10, 2011 - link

    My last Intel cpu was a prescott 2.4ghz P4 OC'd to over 3ghz... back in 2004? My last 3 main system builds all AMD.... I was thinking about going to an X6 in the near future, now I guess maybe not. My price point is pretty much $200 for the cpu + motherboard so maybe I'll have to wait a couple months.

    Suddenly my 2 year old Phenom II seems very, very slow...
  • magnusr - Tuesday, January 11, 2011 - link

    I just received my 2600K. It only had the normal fan. No special heatsink/fan for the 2600K. The same heatsink as the rest....

    This is a fraud since I placed my decision to take 2600K instead of the 2500K based on the better heatsink and the cache.
  • mmcnally - Tuesday, January 11, 2011 - link

    Same here.. Very disapointed as I would have purchased a better heatsink if I knew. I guess I'll just do the install with the standard crap HS and hold off on over-clocking until I get a better one.
  • swing848 - Tuesday, January 11, 2011 - link

    Many of us are using older equipment. And, for those of us with limited funds it would have been nice if you would have added the Intel Q9650 and run all game benchmarks at 3.4GHz [ the speed of the 2600K], except for the default 3.6GHz speed of the X4 975BE, leave it there.

    I have a QX9650 that I purchased from eBay and it does 4GHz+ with ease, in a Gigabyte P35-DS3R motherboard, even with my ancient cooler [Thermalright XP-90] that I pulled from a socket 478 motherboard [$5 adapter].

    Note: I lapped the XP-90 with a slight convex shape to better use with un-lapped CPUs.

    In any event, a "quick and dirty" or simple overclock would have yielded at least some usable information. To save time, no need to try to get the maximum speed from all components.

    As long as the CPUs were already overclocked, you could run all benchmarks at those speeds, not just games. Many of us overclock to get more for our money.

    You included the ancient Q6600 at it's slow default speed - in some of the benchmarks. Why didn't you include it in all benchmarks?

    Your normal benchmark page does not include a full, or nearly full, list of games and CPUs, so, comparisons are difficult to find, example here anandtech.com/bench/CPU/62

    Where does this leave those of us with older equipment that is still chugging along?
  • Kell_sw - Thursday, January 13, 2011 - link

    DRM inside the cpu? People is blind?. The sad thing, everybody is going to buy this.
  • Sweeo - Friday, January 14, 2011 - link

    I just bought a upgrade "kit" from an core 2 2.8 quad to i7 950 :(
    but I got 6 sata ports I noticed the new boards have 4+2
    will the more advanced boards have more ?
  • Ahumado - Sunday, January 16, 2011 - link

    I didn't see it discussed. Did I miss it?

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