Lynnfield's Un-Core: Faster Than Most Bloomfields

A few years ago I had a bet going with AMD's Ian McNaughton. We were at an AMD event where the Phenom architecture was first being introduced and he insisted that the L3 cache was part of the memory controller. This didn't make any sense to me so I disagreed. Minutes later a presentation slide went up on a projector talking about how the L3 cache and memory controller were on the same voltage plane; that's what he meant. Ian laughed a lot and to this day he holds it over my head.

The moral of the story is in Phenom and later in Nehalem, the processor is divided into two parts. Intel named them the core and the un-core. The "core" of these multi-core processors is made up of each individual processor core and its associated private caches (L1/L2). The "uncore" refers to everything else: PCIe controller, memory controller, DMI/QPI and the L3 cache.

The uncore isn't as critical for performance but is made up of a ton of transistors; roughly 400 million in the case of Lynnfield/Bloomfield (more if you count the PCIe controller). In order to save power, Intel uses slower transistors that have lower leakage for the un-core. As a result, the un-core can't clock up as high as the core and runs at a lower multiplier.

Take the Bloomfield Core i7 975 for example. The core runs at 25x BCLK (25 x 133MHz = 3.33GHz), but the un-core runs at 20x BCLK (20 x 133MHz = 2.66GHz). The rest of the chips, including Lynnfield, have slower un-cores:

CPU Socket Core Clock Un-Core Clock
Intel Core i7 975 Extreme LGA-1366 3.33GHz 2.66GHz
Intel Core i7 965 Extreme LGA-1366 3.20GHz 2.66GHz
Intel Core i7 950 LGA-1366 3.06GHz 2.13GHz
Intel Core i7 940 LGA-1366 2.93GHz 2.13GHz
Intel Core i7 920 LGA-1366 2.66GHz 2.13GHz
Intel Core i7 870 LGA-1156 2.93GHz 2.40GHz
Intel Core i7 860 LGA-1156 2.80GHz 2.40GHz
Intel Core i5 750 LGA-1156 2.66GHz 2.13GHz

 

Here's another area where Lynnfield is better than the lower end Bloomfields: its uncore runs at 2.40GHz instead of 2.13GHz. The exception being the Core i5 750, its uncore is stuck at 2.13GHz as well. Once again, only the "Extreme" Bloomfields have a faster uncore.

Lynnfield's Memory Controller: Also Faster than Bloomfield

Intel only officially supports two memory speeds on Bloomfield: DDR3-800 and DDR3-1066. Obviously we're able to run it much faster than that, but this is what's officially validated and supported on the processors.

Lynnfield is a year newer and thus gets a tweaked memory controller. The result? Official DDR3-1333 support.


Three Lynnfield memory kits (left to right): OCZ, Patriot and Kingston

The same sort of rules apply to Lynnfield memory kits that we saw with Bloomfield. You don't want to go above 1.65V and thus all the kits we've seen run at 1.5V for the stock JEDEC speeds or 1.65V for the overclocked modules.


Like Bloomfield, 1.65V is the max we'll see on Lynnfield

Lynnfield's Turbo Mode: Up to 17% More Performance Discovery: Two Channels Aren't Worse Than Three
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