AMD has managed to keep information on Llano and Bulldozer to itself, but the former has ended up in the hands of soothepain and been tested. The model is called A8-3800, sports 4 cores at 2.4 GHz where each core has 1 MB L2 cache 400 Radeon cores at 600 MHz.
We earlier reported that the launch of Sabine, the notebook platform, will launch on Tuesday and now we have some benchmarks to share for the desktop platform Lynx. It doesn’t look like an engineering sample (ES) since it is mentioned in CPU-Z, but we can’t be certain and performance seems to be overall between Athlon II and Phenom II clock-for-clock.
Llano looks like just any other AMD processor…
…but underneath we find the new socket FM1
He also shared pictures of the BIOS and what interest us here is what Gigabyte calls Core Performance Boost, which is basically AMD Turbo Boost 2.0. It is set to Auto, but can be changed to your liking, with Llano unlocked you will get a relatively energy efficient circuit with high performance when needed. The question is if Turbo Boost 2.0 is limited by TDP and if it is possible to surpass that limitation some way.
Gigabyte GA-A75-UD4H
The model is called A8-3800. We know that A8-38xx will be the top segment for Llano so there will most likely be faster models. It is not clear if this is a 65W or 100W model. The tests were done with stock settings at 2400 MHz and overclocked to 3000 MHz.
Worth mentioning is that it looks like there is a BIOS bug that interfered with the frequency settings. At 2400 MHz and stock settings the APU has an operating voltage of ~1 V, and at 3000 MHz the voltage was increased to 1.2 V, which seems to point to that this is a 65W model but AMD’s 32nm SOI/HKMG process at GlobalFoundries is still so new that we can’t say anything for certain.
Test program | A8-3800 ~2400 MHz | A8-3800 ~3000 MHz |
AIDA64 Read | 8602 MB/s | 8836 MB/s |
AIDA64 Write | 6155 MB/s | 7122 MB/s |
AIDA64 Copy | 9171 MB/s | 10299 MB/s |
Nuclearus | 9578 | 13061 |
CINEBENCH R11.5 CPU | 2.89 | 3.68 |
CINEBENCH R11.5 OpenGL | 28,94 fps | 30,49 fps |
3Dmark06 | 6616 | 7278 |
3Dmark Vantage | 4019 | 4366 |
3Dmark 11 Extreme Preset | 1764 | 1950 |
Performance was as expected with the old Hound core found in Athlon II and Phenom II, but we wouldn’t mind higher clock frequencies. We know that desktop Llano will ship at 65W and 100W TDPs and since we don’t know which one this is there might be faster models up ahead.
Games | FPS |
Street Fighter 4 | 50,32 |
Hawx DX9 | 54 |
Hawx DX10 | 22 |
Hawx 2 DX9 | 46 |
Hawx 2 DX11 | 34 |
Resident Evil 5 DX9 | 29 |
Resident Evil DX10 | 27,4 |
The integrated graphics circuits is about 30-35% below HD 6570 in performance, although it has 20% mroe Radeon cores and 50 MHz higher clock, so it looks like AMD has done a good job with the shared memory controller.
Roadmap of AMD’s desktop lineup
Llano does look like an attractive alternative for OEMs if the price is right, but it might not be enough for home builders and up in the shadow of Bulldozer later this fall.
Source: Coolaler
There are three types of supercharger kits available in the market, which are commonly used. There could be a slight difference in the way each type works and performs but the basic purpose remains the same.