Benchmarks: Intel's first 45nm Penryn chip

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TECH GUIDE

On 29 October 2007, Intel took the wraps off the first of its Penryn family of processors. The quad-core Intel Core 2 Extreme QX9650, codenamed Yorkfield, replaces the QX6850 and will be available from 12 November. The new CPU runs at 3GHz and has a total of 12MB of Level 2 (L2) cache.

The Penryn architecture is a development of Intel's current Core technology. To complement the new QX9650 chip for high-end desktops, a quad-core server counterpart, codenamed Harpertown, is due to appear later this quarter. Compared with the previous generation of 65nm Core 2 processors, Penryn chips are manufactured with a 45-nanometre (nm) process.

Dual-core Penryn processors, which are codenamed Wolfdale, have 6MB of L2 cache (2 x 3MB); the quad-core Hapertown/Yorkfield chips are essentially two Wolfdale cores on the same package, and therefore have a larger 12MB (2 x 6MB) pool of L2 cache. The Penryn microarchitecture also offers more efficient execution and an upgrade to SSE4. The 47 new SSE4 instructions are mostly aimed at improving the performance of multimedia applications such as video compression. Although Intel offers quad-core Penryn processors for servers and desktops, notebooks will have to get along with dual-core chips for now.

Intel will announce further Penryn chips on 12 November. However, it's likely to take until the beginning of 2008 for most of these to become widely available.

Intel's first processor in the 45nm Penryn family (see table below) is a 3GHz quad-core desktop chip with 12MB of L2 cache, codenamed Yorkfield.

 

Intel's 45nm Penryn processors

   Server  Desktop  Mobile
 Name  Xeon  Core 2 Extreme / Core 2 Quad / Core 2  Core 2 Extreme / Core 2 Duo
 Quad core  Harpertown  Yorkfield  n/a
 L2 cache  2 x 6MB  2 x 6MB  n/a
 Dual core  Wolfdale  Wolfdale  Penryn
 L2 cache  2 x 3MB  2 x 3MB  2 x 3MB

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Talkback

This article states the no load power consumption of the QX9650 to be 190W. Other sources give a totally different figure - only 3.75 watts (http://www.tomshardware.com/2007/10/29/intel_penryn_4ghz_with_air_cooling/page13.html). Am I missing something here?

RayRoko 24 January, 2008 14:55
Reply

Well spotted: the figures in the graph refer to the power consumption of the whole PC, not just the CPU. A translation glitch from the original ZDNet Germany article there -- now corrected.

Charles McLellan 24 January, 2008 16:21
Reply

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