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Review: AMD Thunderbird 1Ghz

by David Ross on 30 October 2000, 00:00

Tags: AMD (NYSE:AMD)

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AMD Thunderbird 1Ghz

Right, well lets admit it AMD weren't very good before the launch of the original Athlon, but since then they have dominated the market, since the release of this Athlon there has always been a need for a cheaper version, one with more value added, this is where the Duron comes in to play, but some of us, well we don't want to play with the low end CPUs. So AMD have released the Thunderbird, this uses the full 256K of internal L2 Cache. It uses the new socket A format chip, and basically a Thunderbird Processor is a Duron but with one crucial difference, more L2 cache. The Thunderbird uses 256K L2 cache compared to the Duron mere 64K.

The Specs:

Feature

AMD Athlon Processor

Slot A/Socket A

Operations per clock cycle

9

Integer pipelines

3

Floating point pipelines

3

Full x86 decoders

3

L1 cache size

128KB

L2 cache size

Internal, 256KB

Peak bus bandwidth

1.6 GB

Bus outstanding transactions

24 per processor

Clock technology

Source synchronous
(Clock forwarding)

3D enhancement instructions

- Total no. of instructions

- Single-precision FP SIMD

- 4 FP operations per clock

- Cache/prefetch controls

- Streaming controls

- DSP/comm extensions

Enhanced 3DNow!™ technology

45

Yes

Yes

Yes

Yes

Yes

Multiprocessing support

Yes, point-to-point

Max. system processors

Unlimited (by chipset)

No. of transistors per die

~22 million – 37 million

To test this CPU I put it in the Abit KT7 raid Motherboard have heard problems can be incurred by the amount of power the cpus uses as the CPU has a high power consumption, so I put in my Aopen 300W and ran this with my Geforce 2 64MB Card provided by Elsa, and also with my full Scsi setup, without a single problem

So far the only official supporting boards are the VIA KT133 and the AMD 750, although all the other chipset makers, have come up with their own solution soon to be released. Another thing is that because of the CPU’s new Socket A format, there is no need for GFDs and the multiplier can be unlocked using a pencil ;) To compare this I set the multiplier to only 7 as we could see what it was like compared to a Duron 700 CPU, I did some benchmarks later with the CPU set at full speed the full 1Ghz.

Anyway on to testing: -

For the benchmarks performed I used the following spec PC for the AMD Cpu's:
Test System: -
Coolermaster ATCS 200 Case
Abit KT7 Raid
1Ghz TBird CPU
Alpha PAL Cooler
Hedgehog Cooler
Global Win FOP38 Cooler
Elsa Ge-force 64MB GTS
1 * Crucial 128meg PC133 Cas2 Dimm
1 * Mushkin 128Meg PC150 Cas2 Dimm
Quantum Viking 2 9.1 GB LVD SCSI DRIVE
Seagate Barracuda 50.1GB LVD
Soundblaster Live Soundcard
Adaptec 2904u2w Scsi card
Pioneer 6xDVD/32xCD Scsi
Teac 32X CDRom Scsi
And my baybus ;)

For testing the Intel CPU's I used the same base with the Abit BX-133 Raid

The Thunderbird is just behind the P3 which is the leader here, it compares well with the P3 but the Duron is with the Celeron here just how AMD wanted it to be.

In this test all the CPUs come within a few point of each other, the Duron scoring very well and beating a PIII.

Again all CPUs do well, but the TBird is winning again, but beats the Duron, whilst the Celeron is lagging behind.


3D Mark Results.


This may seem low but don't forget it was under Windows 2000!

SiSoft Results







Conclusion : This CPU is excellent it is the best on the market at the moment, there is nothing better it is a shame that Intel are so far behind but what will the P4 bring ;) Well we would like to say AMD this is a good CPU, it isn't as good as the Duron for overclocking but it sure is the way to go for a reliable fast CPU which is very good at its job, this CPU can be used for power hungry gaming as well as heavy office applications I would recommend to people to use this CPU but if your on a budget go for the Duron, for less than £100 you can have a 750 over clocked to 1Ghz ;) Yep AMD are the daddies now, come on Intel are you going to drop out ?:)