Cache boost
But before we divulge the full details of Phenom's performance, we need to do the housekeeping on the handful of detail changes AMD has made to its processor architecture in the shift to 45nm.
The most obvious change is a boost in shared L3 cache memory from 2MB to 6MB. Add in the 512k of L3 cache attached to each core and you have a grand total of 8MB.
It's that boost in cache that swallows up the bulk of the increase to 758 million transistors for the new 45nm Deneb core.
New socket
AMD has also overhauled both the chip's memory controller and HyperTransport communications link. The former receives support for DDR3 memory. The latter is now the full HyperTransport 3.0 Monty. However, both of those upgraded features are dependent on the presence of the new AM3 socket, due out later this year.
AM3 will, of course, be physically compatible with the existing AM2 and AM2+ sockets. Should you choose, you can buy your Phenom II today, drop it into an AM2 board and then swap it over to an AM3 board in future, exposing the added functionality.
Finally, the execution cores have been massaged with a view to releasing a few more instructions per clock, otherwise known as IPC. But even AMD concedes the improvement in IPC only aids overall performance by a few percentage points.
As we said, Deneb is not a revolutionary new architecture. But thanks to the 45nm silicon and a general lack of brokenness, it has every opportunity to fulfil its potential.
Cost is everything
As ever for AMD, pricing will be key. At launch, the top AMD Phenom II X4 940 BE slots into the narrow gap between Intel's Core 2 Q9400, which generally goes for about £215, and the new entry-level Core i7 chip, the 920, typically yours for around £240.
The 3GHz Phenom II X4 940 is also joined by the slightly cheaper 920 model. It's mostly identical to the 940, includes the full 8MB of cache but runs at 2.8GHz. It also lacks the 940's OC enthusiast-friendly unlocked multiplier.
This month, it's the 940 Black Edition we've taken for a spin. First impressions are unambiguously good. In our tests, the new chip manages to not only reduce power consumption by an enormous 56 Watts compared to the outgoing old 65nm Phenom X4 9950 Black Edition, but it also runs fully 25°C cooler. And that's despite the 400MHz increase in clockspeed. In our deepest Quake III voice, that is IMPRESSIVE.
Gaming performance
Another pleasant surprise is how well it stacks up against the Core 2 Q9400 CPU.
Essentially, it trades blows with the Q9400, winning in media encoding and professional rendering and coming up only a tiny bit short in the Crysis Warhead and Blu-ray decoding benchmarks.
Admittedly, the Core i7 920 does give it a moderately hefty shoeing. However, with the current prices of Core i7 motherboard's being well north of £200, not to mention the added cost of properly populating that Core i7's monstrous triple channel memory controller, there's a substantial hidden price differential beyond the mere cost of the CPUs in question.
If there's one area where the Phenom II slightly disappoints, though, it's in sheer overclocking prowess. The 3.7GHz our sample is capable of is extremely solid, even if it does require you to be a bit of a mentalist with the voltages (1.575v, if you must know).
But after watching Phenoms running at 4GHz on air cooling in the Lone Star State late last year, we were expecting just a tiny bit more. Despite this, with everything else the AMD Phenom II X4 840 BE serves up tasting so good, that's certainly something we can swallow.



Tell us what you think
You need to Log in or register to post comments