The heat sink models used with the A75F-A are of a typical style with a design that increases the cooling area
If you touch the heat sink, you’ll find the actual surface temperature is quite low, but if you use a more attractive heat sink, it’s certain to have a stronger selling point
Test Platform
CPU: AMD A8-3850
MB: ECS A75F-A
DRAM: CORSAIR CMZ8GX3M2A1866C9R
VGA: AMD Radeon HD6550D
HD: CORSAIR FORCEGT 120GB
POWER: Thermaltake TR2 450W
Cooler: Thermaltake BigTyp 14Pro
OS: Windows7 Ultimate 64bit SP1
CPU Default Performance Test
CPU 100.0 X 29 => 2900.4MHz
DDR3 1866.8 CL8 9-7-27 1T
Hyper PI 32M X 4 => 23m 00.134s
CPUMARK 99 => 418
Nuclearus Multi Core => 12315
Fritz Chess Benchmark => 14.86/7131
CrystalMark 2004R3 => 200725
CINEBENCH R11.5
CPU => 3.46 pts
CPU(Single Core) => 0.88 pts
PCMark Vantage => 12700
Windows Experience Index - CPU 7.3
The A8-3850’s performance is little changed from the previous generation Phenom II, even when the CPU cache sizes of both L2 and L3 are slightly different.
For those who need quad-core CPU performance, AMD offers better cost to performance,
but regarding the single-thread performance of AMD CPUs, I still feel that in the future, AMD still has a lot of room to improve
DRAM Bandwidth
DDR3 1866.8 CL8 9-7-27 1T
ADIA64 Memory Read - 9360 MB/s
Sandra Memory Bandwidth - 15775 MB/s
MaXXMEM Memory-Copy - 10680 MB/s
This is where the Llano APU platform has made progress. The CPU default is adjustable up to DDR3 1866, which is a bit higher than the previous 1600 platform.
While the bandwidth and their platform have made a bit more progress, compared with rivals such as the Sandy Bridge platform, the bandwidth seems to be lagging further behind ...
DDR3 bandwidth is where AMD needs to improve in the future, and we hope that performance will improve with the launch of the Bulldozer










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