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AMD Athlon 64 6000+ Launched And Tested

Spinnerbait writes "AMD officially launched their next speed bump in the Athlon 64 product line, in the form of a new 3GHz part branded the Athlon 64 6000+. This new dual-core Athlon 64 sports 1MB of on-chip cache per core and is designed for AMD's Socket AM2 platform. This chip is still built on AMD's 90nm fab node and is comprised of some 227 million transistors. It also carries a thermal power profile of about 125Watts. Unfortunately, in all the benchmarks seen here, it was still unable to catch Intel's Core 2 Duo E6700 chip at 2.66GHz."

2 of 156 comments (clear)

  1. Low power chips too by Bill+Dimm · · Score: 5, Informative

    In the full announcement they also mention new 45W single-core desktop processors: Athlon 64 3500+ for $88, and 3800+ for $93.

  2. Re:But hey... by TheThiefMaster · · Score: 5, Informative

    The X2 names are double the clock speed (in MHz) for 1MB cache parts, 200 less than that for 512kB cache parts, and 400 less for the 256kB cache part. It seems they've stopped looking at them as Intel cpu performance equivalence numbers. The single-core chips still seem to be named pretty much arbitrarily.

    Complete list:
    3000MHz dual-core 1MB = 3000x2 = 6000
    2800MHz dual-core 1MB = 2800x2 = 5600
    2800MHz dual-core 512kB = 2800x2 - 200 = 5400
    2600MHz dual-core 1MB = 2600x2 = 5200
    2600MHz dual-core 512kB = 2600x2 - 200 = 5000
    2500MHz dual-core 512kB = 2500x2 - 200 = 4800
    2400MHz dual-core 1MB = 2400x2 = 4800
    2400MHz dual-core 512kB = 2400x2 - 200 = 4600
    2300MHz dual-core 512kB = 2300x2 - 200 = 4400
    2200MHz dual-core 1MB = 2200x2 = 4400
    2200MHz dual-core 512kB = 2200x2 - 200 = 4200
    2100MHz dual-core 512kB = 2100x2 - 200 = 4000
    2000MHz dual-core 1MB = 2000x2 = 4000
    2000MHz dual-core 512kB = 2000x2 - 200 = 3800
    2000MHz dual-core 256kB = 2000x2 - 400 = 3600
    1900MHz dual-core 512kB = 1900x2 - 200 = 3600