Turion 64: Difference between revisions
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* Power consumption ([[Thermal Design Point|TDP]]): 25/35 Watt max |
* Power consumption ([[Thermal Design Point|TDP]]): 25/35 Watt max |
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* First release: [[March 10]], [[2005]] |
* First release: [[March 10]], [[2005]] |
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* Clock rate: 1600, 1800, 2000 MHz |
* Clock rate: 1600, 1800, 2000, 2200 MHz |
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** 25W [[Thermal Design Point|TDP]]: |
** 25W [[Thermal Design Point|TDP]]: |
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*** MT-30: 1600 MHz (1024 KB L2-Cache) |
*** MT-30: 1600 MHz (1024 KB L2-Cache) |
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*** ML-34: 1800 MHz (1024 KB L2-Cache) |
*** ML-34: 1800 MHz (1024 KB L2-Cache) |
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*** ML-37: 2000 MHz (1024 KB L2-Cache) |
*** ML-37: 2000 MHz (1024 KB L2-Cache) |
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*** ML-40: 2200 MHz (1024 KB L2-Cache) |
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==See also== |
==See also== |
Revision as of 13:41, 11 August 2005
Turion 64 is AMD's 64-bit mobile processor, intended to compete with Intel's Pentium M. It is compatible with AMD's Socket 754 and is equipped with 512 or 1024 KB of L2 cache, a 64-bit single channel on-die memory controller, and an 800MHz HyperTransport bus. A new socket for Turion 64 and other mobile AMD processors, known as Socket S, will arrive in 2006.
Cores
Lancaster (90 nm SOI)
- L1 cache: 64 + 64 KB (data + instructions)
- L2 cache: 512 or 1024 KB, fullspeed
- MMX, Extended 3DNow!, SSE, SSE2, SSE3, AMD64, Power Now!, NX Bit
- Socket 754, HyperTransport (800 MHz, HT800)
- VCore: 1.00V - 1.45V
- Power consumption (TDP): 25/35 Watt max
- First release: March 10, 2005
- Clock rate: 1600, 1800, 2000, 2200 MHz
- 25W TDP:
- MT-30: 1600 MHz (1024 KB L2-Cache)
- MT-32: 1800 MHz (512 KB L2-Cache)
- MT-34: 1800 MHz (1024 KB L2-Cache)
- 35W TDP:
- ML-28: 1600 MHz (512 KB L2-Cache)
- ML-30: 1600 MHz (1024 KB L2-Cache)
- ML-32: 1800 MHz (512 KB L2-Cache)
- ML-34: 1800 MHz (1024 KB L2-Cache)
- ML-37: 2000 MHz (1024 KB L2-Cache)
- ML-40: 2200 MHz (1024 KB L2-Cache)
- 25W TDP:
See also
References
- Reuters news report on the announcement of the chips
- Physorg report on the chip becoming available
- Detailed review on the AMD Turion 64 at www.gamepc.com by Chris Connolly, 4 April 2005
External links
Non-computing definitions
- Turion is also a winter bud of water vegetation.