The Athlon 64 FX-53: AMD's Next Enthusiast Part
by Derek Wilson on March 18, 2004 11:00 AM EST- Posted in
- CPUs
SYSmark 2004 Overall
The entire SYSmark run, which includes all the individual tests that we will be reporting, took anywhere between two and three hours to run. The two main suites (Internet Content Creation and Office Productivity) each took up half of the time (in contrast to Winstone, where the business benchmark completes much faster than content creation).
The overall score, which takes a little of everything into account, shows the Gallatin based 3.4GHz Extreme Edition coming out on top, followed closely by the AMD Athlon 64 FX-53.
Sysmark is still new to us as a benchmark, and these numbers don't tend to exactly represent the rest of the real world data that we have collected.
We included these numbers for the sake of completeness, but we are not going to draw any conclusions based on the benchmark, as we have not had much experience with it. We do know that this time around, AMD did have equal input into the creation of the benchmark, and while the FX-53 does put in a good showing for AMD, the benchmark seems to favor Intel's architectures.
SYSmark 2004 Internet Content Creation
SYSmark 2004 3D Content Creation
SYSmark 2004 2D Content Creation
SYSmark 2004 Web Publication
SYSmark 2004 Office Productivity
SYSmark 2004 Communications
SYSmark 2004 Document Creation
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johnsonx - Tuesday, March 23, 2004 - link
I looked at the FX-53 benchmarks on THG, and their benches vs. the FX-51 are right in line with what they should be... I don't see any descrepency as with AT's tests.From this I conclude that AT must indeed have tested the FX-53 with the OCZ memory, but used the Mushkin memory with the FX-51. That difference must explain the higher than expected performance of the FX-53.
That also suggests that OCZ memory is pretty good stuff...
nourdmrolNMT1 - Monday, March 22, 2004 - link
yea, i ment registered, my bad.MIKE
johnsonx - Saturday, March 20, 2004 - link
To #27: that's my point. For the FX-53 to perform more than 9.1% faster than the FX-51, *SOMETHING* must be different. FactMan (#25) suggests the FX-53 is indeed a new stepping with some improvements.In my second note, I also observed that AT tested the FX-51 & FX-53 with different memory, though the article is none too clear on this point.
Finally, as I pointed out in post 23, ECC is NOT required for the Athlon64 FX. The FX clearly *supports* ECC, but it is not required. Registered memory IS required for both the Opteron and Athlon64 FX.
nourdmrolNMT1 - Saturday, March 20, 2004 - link
why cant the fx-53 perform more than 9.1% better? it could have some revised coding within it which allows for better allocation of data, and improved prefetch, etc.it requires ecc. so you have to run with ecc
MIKE
truApostle - Friday, March 19, 2004 - link
According to AMD and factually speaking after running a slew of benchmarks, the FX-53 performs only 108% faster than the speed of the 64 3400 Athlon. This number was in overal~gaming prowess, period. I'm not too concerned with encoding, compiling, blah blah blah so I leave that to the folks who are. Man it's too hard to justify the extra cost of the FX-53 in relation to the 3400 with only 6-8% difference in speed, which at any rate is most likey un-noticeable anyhow. For me, and this is purely my humble opinion, the extra money price difference would better be suited a mess load of BAWLS.FactMan - Friday, March 19, 2004 - link
In Reply to 16There are two things that are likely to be the reason for the superlinear performence improvement.
1) The integrated memory controller runs at core speed, hence increased clockspeed makes the mem controller faster and reduces latency.
2) It's build upon the newer CG stepping. This stepping fixes and improves several things, mainly to the memory controller.
bldkc - Friday, March 19, 2004 - link
WHY CAN'T THEY COLOR CODE THE CHARTS! I have to spend three times as long reading each chart to determine who placed where as I do on a color coded chart such as those posted on Toms site. It is really annoying. I color code my charts at work. Every college class teaches color codeing. My 6 year old daughter color codes her drawings! Come on!!johnsonx - Friday, March 19, 2004 - link
TO #18, Athlon64Boy: The Athlon 64 FX retains the Registered requirement of the Opteron, but they were able eliminate the ECC requirement.After I posed my question, I did look around a bit for PC3200 Registered Non-ECC memory: it is something of a rare animal, but it does exist. (I think it's pretty A64FX specific). On Newegg.com, only CorsairXMS is offered in Reg/Non-ECC. Their website specifically touts this memory as being tested in AthlonFX motherboards:
http://www.corsairmicro.com/corsair/products/specs...
I suppose AT may have run their tests with ECC disabled, which as far as I know would eliminate any extra performance penalty. It may also be that the A64FX memory controller runs ECC and Non-ECC with equal efficiency... but there's always been a performance penalty in the past with ECC, registered or not.
yumarc - Friday, March 19, 2004 - link
I've been hearing "Hold off til socket 939" for almost 6 months now. It appears Anandtech.com has become a PR mouthpiece for AMD, or at the very least, become irresponsible to the point of recommending hardware that no one has publicly tested, priced, or seen. The future is now and socket 940 exists now. Don't forget the definition of the term, "vaporware".Xaazier - Friday, March 19, 2004 - link
when is socket 939 due?