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Intel vs AMD - The Choice Is Harder Than Ever (Part 1)

10/19/2012 1:12:05 AM

Intel and AMD have long battled to empty consumers' wallets by offering the fastest processors. With this new selection on the market, the choice is harder than ever. We put 62 top chips on test to find out which is most worthy of your cash.

Description: Description: Intel vs AMD

Intel vs AMD

Upgrading your PC with a new processor isn’t always a case of just ordering one and locking it into your motherboard. There are important factors to take into account, and they become more numerous as your PC gets older.

The main consideration is the motherboard. Every generation or so, a new range of processors will make a move to a new socket, designed to take full advantage of their capabilities. This means you can’t usually put a new processor in a motherboard that’s more than two years old and expect it to fit.

The feature table opposite shows that the current generation of CPUs is based on only a handful of sockets, so it isn’t as complicated as it has been in the past; however, it pays to be sure you have a compatible motherboard before making a purchase.

The second consideration is graphics. The majority of processors available today include an integrated GPU, so as long as your motherboard has video outputs, you won’t need a discrete graphics card as well. Some boards - mostly at the low end - don’t, however; so again be sure to check the feature table before buying, otherwise you could find yourself needing to shell out for a card just to get your monitor connected.

The final consideration is cooling, although you could simply use the cooler that’s included with your processor. This will be fine in normal use with many of the latest processors, and it’s also fine for mild overclocking - most have plenty of headroom. If you want to perform serious overclocking, however, it can pay to invest in a proper third-party cooler, as temperatures can become pretty toasty as you push up the frequency ever higher.

The latest Ivy Bridge Core i7 chips approached 100°C when we ran stress tests with the stock cooler. Overclocked systems regularly arrive in the Labs, and these clearly demonstrate the extra heat generated: Core i5 and Core i7 chips running at 4.6GHz and upwards push even the best third-party coolers to their limits.

If you’ve thought about all of these aspects and know what you’re after, turn the page and start reading our breakdown of each processor family. Then flip to pi58 to see where they sit in the price-performance graph. There’s a perfect chip for all budgets.

How we test

Performance is divided into three categories. The Media test uses Adobe Photoshop CS5, Sony Vegas Pro 10 and Apple iTunes to edit and encode images, audio and video into a variety of formats. The Multitasking test runs a selection of applications designed to evaluate the multicore and multithreaded processors in this month’s test. The third test - Responsiveness - opens, moves and closes multiple applications and windows to simulate everyday Windows usage; the better the score, the livelier your system will feel.

Description: in a real-world test using Adobe Photoshop CS5, Ivy Bridge was once again the fastest chip tested but the margin of victory was much smaller – only two seconds faster than its counterpart

in a real-world test using Adobe Photoshop CS5, Ivy Bridge was once again the fastest chip tested but the margin of victory was much smaller – only two seconds faster than its counterpart

We also load up our Crysis, Just Cause 2 and DiRT 3 benchmarks at a variety of resolutions and quality settings to test the gaming potential of the various graphics cores included in both Intel and AMD processors. Our thermal tests evaluate the idle and peak temperature of each processor, and the power requirements of our test rig with different chips installed.

Value for Money

The Value for Money score is based on the benchmark results of each chip - we take this data, factor in how much each processor costs, and deliver a bang-per-buck result. We’ve combined much of this data below, so you can see exactly which processors represent the best and worst value for money.

Overall

The Overall rating is an average of the Performance and Value for Money scores, although due to rounding the figure may be higher or lower than you’d expect.

Test rigs

This month has seen several different test rigs built in the PC Pro labs, with LGA 1155, LGA 2011, Socket FM1 and Socket FM3 machines assembled in order to test all the processors on the market. We standardised equipment as much as possible across all of our test systems: each uses 8GB of DDR3 RAM, a top-end SSD for storage, and a discrete AMD Radeon HD 6500 Series graphics card. We used discrete cards to achieve consistent results across processors with and without integrated graphics.

 

Intel Core i7

Intel's top-end chips remain unchallenged by AMD, but are beginning to look niche as Core i5s become ever faster.

When the Core i7 first arrived in 2008, it was the daddy of desktop CPUs - the processing pinnacle that only an enthusiast would even consider buying. It still is to a certain extent, but since we passed the point at which a Core i5 was powerful enough for most applications long ago, does the i7 offer anything that makes it worth the extra cost?

Description: Description: Intel Core i7

Intel Core i7

All i7 processors have at least four cores, with the top i7-3900 series boasting six. Unlike the Core i5 range, however, these cores are enhanced by Hyper-Threading so they can handle eight or 12 concurrent threads. This is of limited use in most applications, but there are a few that take full advantage of multithreaded optimisation: video-editing and 3D rendering tools are the obvious examples. A Core i7 excels if you use demanding applications such as Adobe Premiere Pro or Sony Vegas Pro every day.

Core i7 processors Turbo Boost to higher clock speeds than their Core i5 siblings. This means, while the Core i5-2400 and Core i7-3770S both run at 3.1GHz, their maximum Turbo Boosts differ: 3.4GHz for the Core i5; 3.9GHz for the Core i7. The gap is smaller at higher speeds, but is usually present.

Performance

A Sandy Bridge Core i7 is now lagging when compared with newer, high-end chips. The i7-2600K scored 1.05 in our benchmarks, barely faster than the 1.04 of a Core i5-3570K. It also has a much higher power draw and costs $75 more, which makes it uncompetitive. The same applies to the Core i7-2700K - its 1.08 score is beaten by the new low-voltage i7-3770S, which is almost the same price. The former’s unlocked multiplier, ripe for overclocking, is its only significant advantage.

Description: Intel Core i7

Full-fat Ivy Bridge chips are much better. The i7-3770 and i7-3770K scored an impressive 1.14 and 1.18 in our benchmarks - the former for a $342 price that’s similar to those Sandy Bridge chips, and the latter for $377 with the bonus of easy overclocking thanks to its unlocked multiplier, denoted by the “K” suffix.

If you have an LGA 2011 motherboard, be warned that the current trio of Sandy Bridge-E chips is lost in this company: they’re either slower than similarly priced LGA 1155 chips, or faster but prohibitively expensive.

The only reason to consider buying them is their multithreaded performance. The $1,140 Core i7-3960X scored 1.14 overall, but its 12 logical cores delivered a massive 1.65 and 1.47 in the video and 3D rendering benchmark segments.

The verdict

Our favourites are the i7-3770 and i7-3770K: the former is faster than its rivals for no extra cash, and the latter is faster still with huge overclocking potential. The i7-3770S is a worthwhile, energy-efficient alternative. Meanwhile, the top-end LGA 2011 parts are ludicrously priced for their admittedly impressive performance, with no premium placed on Ivy Bridge technology compared to the prices you’ll have to pay for Sandy Bridge silicon.

The problem is that these chips are overshadowed by increasingly impressive Core i5s. Stock performance is ample for most people and, with some healthy overclocking, the i5-3570K will match most of these Core i7s for less cash, albeit with fewer cores. That reaffirms our belief that Core i7 processors are great for power users but overkill for everyone else.

Know your sockets

Every Intel processor in this Labs uses the same LGA 1155 socket except for three Sandy Bridge-E models. The Core i7-3960X, i7-3930K and i7-3820 are only compatible with LGA 2011 - and despite using the Ivy Bridge i7-3000 naming convention, they're actually Sandy Bridge parts.

The LGA 2011 socket was Intel's high-end branch created exclusively for Sandy Bridge-E processors, although it's likely that there will be Ivy Bridge-E models arriving towards the end of this year. So while it's by no means the wrong platform on which to base your PC, be aware that LGA 2011 will effectively limit your future upgrade choices to a small group of Intel's most expensive enthusiast processors. For the vast majority of users, LGA 1155 is the more sensible choice.

Model

Speed

Responsiveness

Media

Multitasking

Overall

Price (inc VAT)

Rating

i7-2600K

3.4GHz

0.99

1.11

1.06

1.05

$275 ($330)

4/6

i7-2700K

3.5GHz

1.01

1.14

1.09

1.08

$288 ($347)

4/6

i7-3820

3.6GHz

0.93

1.08

1.02

1.01

$282 ($330)

3/6

i7-3930K

3.2GHz

0.92

1.23

1.24

1.13

$510 ($614)

3/6

i7-3960X

3.3GHz

0.92

1.26

1.26

1.14

$950 ($1,140)

4/6

i7-3770S

3.1GHz

0.98

1.17

1.11

1.09

$287 ($345)

5/6

i7-3770

3.4GHz

1.03

1.22

1.17

1.14

$285 ($342)

5/6

i7-3770

3.4GHz

1.03

1.22

1.17

1.14

$285 ($342)

5/6

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