Test Setup

For this initial look, we're only going to include a subset of our performance benchmarks. Normally we would include results from PCMark, but the Clarksfield system shipped with an SSD and the other test systems have their own take on storage, making PCMark results meaningless. We all know SSDs are faster at certain tasks, but without using the same SSD in all three systems we can't really compare performance. That's part of the reason why this is only an abbreviated preview; we have a lot more benchmark results, but we're not just comparing CPU performance. We will have a complete review of all three notebooks in the near future, where we will go into further details about configuration options. For now, here's the skinny on what we are testing.

Clevo W87CU Test System
Processor Intel Core i7-920XM (2.0GHz 55W TDP)
(Quad-core + Hyper-Threading, 45nm, 4x256K L2, 8MB L3)
Memory 2x2048MB PC3-10700 @ DDR3-1333 9-9-9-24
Graphics 1 x NVIDIA GTX 280M (Driver Version 186.81)
Display 17.3" Glossy WXSGA+ (1600x900)
Hard Drive OCZ Vertex 120GB SSD
Optical Drive 8x SATA DVDR
Battery 6-cell, 11.1V, 3800mAh, 42.18Wh
Operating System Windows Vista Home Premium SP1 64-bit

Eurocom M980NU XCaliber Test System
Processor Intel Core 2 QX9300 (2.53GHz, 45W TDP)
(Quad-core, 45nm, 2x6MB Shared L2)
Memory 2x2048MB PC3-10700 @ DDR3-1333 9-9-9-24
Graphics 2 x NVIDIA GTX 280M (Driver Version 186.03 SLI/186.81 No SLI)
Display 18.4" Glossy 1080p (1920x1080)
Hard Drive Seagate 500GB 16MB 7200RPM
(Momentus 7200.4 ST9500420ASG)
Optical Drive 8x SATA DVDR/BD-ROM
Battery 9-cell, 14.8V, 4650mAh, 68.82Wh
Operating System Windows Vista Home Premium SP1 64-bit

AVADirect Clevo D900F Test System
Processor Intel Core i7-975 (3.33GHz, 130W TDP)
(Quad-core + Hyper-Threading, 45nm, 4x256K L2, 8MB L3)
Memory 3x2048MB PC3-8500 @ DDR3-1066 7-7-7-20
Graphics 1 x NVIDIA GTX 280M (Driver Version 186.81)
Display 17.0" Glossy WUXGA (1920x1200)
Hard Drive 2 x OCZ Vertex 30GB SSDs in RAID 0
Seagate 500GB 16MB 7200RPM
(Momentus 7200.4 ST9500420AS)
Optical Drive 8x SATA DVDR
Battery 12-cell, 14.4V, 6600mAh, 95.04Wh
Operating System Windows Vista Home Premium SP1 64-bit

Clevo's W87CU is our Clarksfield test platform. Unfortunately (fortunately), Intel shipped it to us with their 80GB SSD and Windows 7. That creates a couple problems. First, all of our previous laptop results come from Windows Vista, and as we recently showed, your choice of OS makes a difference. Since we wanted to try to compare apples-to-apples, we replaced the OS with Vista on our own OCZ Vertex 120GB SSD (our disk cloning software wouldn't work with the W87CU hardware, so we left the original Windows 7 installation alone - we will go back to it in a later review). The system ships with a single GTX 280M.

Representing the old guard, Eurocom's M980NU XCaliber uses a Core 2 Extreme QX9300 - the pinnacle of laptop performance prior to the launch of Clarksfield. The CPU is paired up with two GTX 280M graphics cards in SLI, all stuffed into a gigantic 18.4" chassis. This is essentially the NVIDIA equivalent of the 4870X2 ASUS W90Vp, with a slightly faster CPU. (Remember that the W90Vp allows an easy overclock to 2.27GHz.) We will also test performance with SLI disabled in order to compare results with the other two notebooks.

The final entrant in our benchmarks today really muddies the waters. The Clarksfield i7-920XM is the fastest mobile CPU currently available, which makes the Clevo W87CU the fastest notebook available, right? Well, no, since Clevo already went and stuffed a desktop i7 Bloomfield CPU into their D900F - and not just any Bloomfield CPU; the D900F supports everything up to the top-end i7-975. AVADirect was kind enough to send us just such a system for review, and it also ships with a single GTX 280M. It also has dual 30GB SSDs for the primary drive, providing a ton of bandwidth for data transfers.

What we have are three top-of-the-line desktop replacement notebooks, using the three fastest CPUs you can find in a notebook (even if one of them is a desktop CPU). All of the systems use NVIDIA's GTX 280M, so when we look at graphics performance we can remove the GPU as a factor and see how the CPUs impact frame rates - if at all.

Clarksfield Summary System Performance
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  • Roland00 - Thursday, September 24, 2009 - link

    Problem with an ips panel in a laptop is that ips panels need brighter backlighting due to the technology letting less light through than an tn panel. Thus higher power consumption.
  • strikeback03 - Thursday, September 24, 2009 - link

    That's fine, but make it an option for those of us who would happily give up some battery life for a better panel.
  • Pneumothorax - Wednesday, September 23, 2009 - link

    Looks like the next decent launch of laptop chips will be 32nm. This hot & overpriced chip reminds me of the 'ol crappy Pentium 4M's that were around prior to being destroyed by Banias.
  • Exar3342 - Wednesday, September 23, 2009 - link

    You realize these use the same power as most existing dual-cores, right?
  • gstrickler - Wednesday, September 23, 2009 - link

    No, they don't. The Clarksfield CPUs are 55W or 45W TDP. The current Core 2 Quad mobile CPUs are 45W TDP. You're getting more performance for similar maximum power usage to the C2Q, and lower idle power, so it's definitely an improvement overall.

    The current line of Core 2 Duo mobile CPUs tops out at 35W TDP. Switch to 45nm and step down in speed and you can get down to 28W @ 2.8G, down to 25W @ 2.66GHz, down to 17W @ 2.13GHz, or down to 10W @ 1.6GHz, all as Core 2 Duos.

    Lower voltage (and lower TDP) versions of the Core i7 mobile CPUs may show up in the future, but right now, they definitely use more power than Core 2 Duo mobile CPUs, and are similar to current Core 2 Quads.
  • jcompagner - Thursday, September 24, 2009 - link

    You are calculating wrong.

    The 920 is just a extreme proc so lets take the 820 thats a 45W proc. But do remember that it has many more stuff build in that the Core Duo!

    It has the memory controller, it has the pci-e controller.

    The big question is here what does the platform of a Core Duo/Quad so the cpu including the complete chipset use as power compared to the combo 820/PM55 ?? Thats the question people have to ask.

    I find the current setup really good. Anand was a bit wrong about the first 2 pictures of the battery life. It corrected it with the relative battery life picture (the first 2 shouldnt even be shown they are completely irrelevant) and you see there that the out come is pretty good.

    So no they are not similar to the current Core 2 Quads.. You cant compare them 1 on 1.

    About desktops vs Laptops. Around me (friends, co workers, family) there are almost NO desktops anymore. I only have 1 desktop and that isnt used as a real desktop its used as a Media Center below the tv. Almost everybody is using laptops its easily 5 laptops for 1 desktop.

    So i dont get who are buying all those desktops?
  • JarredWalton - Thursday, September 24, 2009 - link

    I wouldn't say the first two battery life pictures are "wrong" - they tell you what the current W87CU will get with the default battery. I don't even know if there's an extended capacity battery available. To ship this sort of system with a puny 42Whr battery is at best very weird. The battery casing is actually very large too, so I don't know why they didn't go with at least a 9-cell ~65Whr battery. That would boost battery life by 50%.
  • jcompagner - Friday, September 25, 2009 - link

    The review compares apple and oranges here.
    We have here an article that compares new processor with other (older) processors. This is not a review of the W87CU laptop.
    When by accident a completely other laptop would used that had a 90Whr battery then suddenly that picture looks totally different!
    So its completely random.

    So the only way to look at it is the real power usage of the complete laptop, not how fast that laptop would run out of its battery.
  • Someguyperson - Wednesday, September 23, 2009 - link

    Did you even read the article, or did you just skim the article? Even though the chips have a higher TDP, the new Clarksfield chips use less power than the old quads. Look at the last four charts of the article and tell me that the 920XM was not the most efficient processor. Keep in mind that this chip is not only the most power-hungry chip out of all Clarksfields, but it also has a GTX 280M, a 17" screen and a 42 watt hour battery.

    To compare, the new ASUS CLUV based notebook gets 4.93 Minutes/WHr, but is clocked 300 MHz lower than the quad will ever go, the CLUV based platform has a G210M GPU, and the whole dual vs. quad w/ turbo boost and hyperthreading thing. To put into more reasonable terms, let's compare the new Clarksfield with my laptop, the Studio XPS 16. Jarred tested the Studio XPS with a P8600 and a HD 3670, I have a P8700 and a HD 4670, which is much better than the HD 3670 by the way, which use a little less power, but are close. Anyway, the Studio XPS 16 uses 36 watts in idle, just like the 920XM machine. At full load, the XPS 16 uses 93 watts, or 110 watts with max brightness and let me tell you, it is bright. The 920XM machine manages 90 watts with a full CPU load and 143 watts with a max load on the CPU and GPU.

    What does all this mean? It means that the 920XM will not just be a desktop replacement, but a desktop replacement that you can actually use under light load away from the outlet (things like internet, music, word processing), whereas before you needed an A/C adapter if you wanted to use your laptop longer than 30 min. That's my two cents.
  • gstrickler - Wednesday, September 23, 2009 - link

    I read the article, apparently more carefully than you did. The Core 2 Quad that it's compared to has 2x GTX 280M GPUs, a HD, and an 18" screen, compared to the 920XM with a single GTX 280M, an SSD, and a 17" screen, and the screens are different resolutions (which will impact CPU/GPU load). We don't know if the GTX 280M GPUs were running at the same clock rate or if they used the same memory type, or the same memory frequency, all of which affect both idle and load power usage. Also, as neither of these machines was optimized for battery life, we have no information about the efficiency of their power supply systems.

    The bottom line is that a comparison of the power consumption on these machines is NOT a direct comparison of the CPU and chipset efficiency. Find a test with two laptops that differ only in the CPU and chipset, then we'll see which one actually uses less power.

    "Max brightness" on two different displays with no measurement of the actual brightness, screen size, screen type, and lighting type is meaningless as a point of comparison. Two different laptop displays at max brightness can draw significantly different amounts of power based upon the factors I mentioned.

    The idle power of the Clarksfield CPUs is very promising, and that might make it a better CPU for battery powered devices, but that's not a valid conclusion to draw from the tests because the machines had too many other differences.

    Don't be so quick to jump to conclusions. While TDP ratings are NOT power utilization ratings, they are an indicator of the maximum power demands of the CPU. Since the 920XM has a 55W TDP, but it's slower versions have a 45W TDP, it's predictable that the 920XM exceeds 45W under load while the QX9300 has a 45W TDP and remains under 45W under load. Intel's TDP #'s are a good guideline for maximum load power.

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