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- From: tvp@gibdo.engr.washington.edu
- Newsgroups: comp.sys.ibm.pc.hardware
- Subject: Re: 486 DX vs DX2: What's the difference ?
- Message-ID: <1992Sep1.052448.6162@u.washington.edu>
- Date: 1 Sep 92 05:24:48 GMT
- Article-I.D.: u.1992Sep1.052448.6162
- References: <1992Aug31.135129.164432@dstos3.dsto.gov.au> <92244.103320REE700A@MAINE.MAINE.EDU> <1992Aug31.200534.15561@tssi.com>
- Sender: news@u.washington.edu (USENET News System)
- Organization: clearer than blir
- Lines: 61
-
- In article <1992Aug31.200534.15561@tssi.com> nolan@tssi.com writes:
- ><REE700A@MAINE.MAINE.EDU> writes:
- >
- >> So, what is the performance ratio? Rather depends on what you do. Most
- >>PC systems are I/O bound anyways... no loss there. Some applications are
- >>CPU bound... no loss there. So, unless your application is memory bound,
- >>you might never know whether it was a DX or DX2! Benchmarks run anywhere
- >>from 50% to 90% performance ratio of a DX2 to a DX...
- >
- >So, which is better: a 50Mhz DX2 or a 33Mhz DX? (Yeah, I know, it depends.)
- >And this is NOT an academic question, these kinds of systems are showing up
- >in the discount stores for roughly the same $$. What you are saying would
- >seem to say that most of the time the 50Mhz DX2 will beat the 33Mhz DX,
- >right?
- >---
- >Michael Nolan, nolan@tssi.com "Freedom of the press is still alive in
- >Tailored Software Services, Inc. America, at the U. S. Mint" (Gallagher)
- >Lincoln, Nebraska (402) 423-1490
-
- This is what PC magazine says in its review of 63 DX2/50 systems
- in a box entitled "DX2 vs. OverDrive: Do You Want Your Speed Boost
- Now or Later?"
-
- "Does the OverDrive chip give true 50-MHz 486DX performance?
- No, but it's close. Intel claims 1.8 times the performance
- of a 25-MHz 486. This coincides with the performance of
- factory installed DX2s seen in this roundup, which performed
- at 96 [sic: they meant 92] percent the speed of a true 50-MHz
- 486DX on PC Magazine Labs' processor benchmark test."
-
- This 92 percent figure roughly matched what I figured for my own
- 486DX2/50 from GW2000. The performance turns out to be BETTER
- than any of us were expecting and luckily the prices won't go
- back *up* because of it. The trick seems to be in the cache size.
- Under "What the Numbers Mean: 486 DX2 PCs" they state:
-
- "Considering only those DX2s that feature at least a 128K
- cache we found that the average DX2/50 performed at 96
- percent of the speed of the average DX/50 (505 versus 525
- operations per second)...
-
- The average memory performance for all the DX2s was 6,314
- KBps (compared with 8,017 KBps for the DX/50s)--78% of the
- performance of true 50-MHz systems....
-
- The reasonable conclusion: Under most applications, PCs
- utilizing the clock-doubler technology should perform
- nearly on the same level as a true 50-MHz 486 when the
- DX2 chip used with an appropriately designed external
- cache. Memory intensive work will suffer, since memory
- accesses leave that fast 50-MHz world inside the CPU
- and venture onto the memory bus at 25MHz."
-
- So there you have it. Hope this helps. (BTW: Occidental's 486DX2/50
- (with 8MB RAM, 240MB 12ms IDE hard drive, one (of eight) local bus
- slots, and SAME DAY SHIPPING) looks pretty good at $2495 depending on
- the video card they're using (The ad doesn't say what it is.).
-
- -- Tad Perry Internet: tvp@gibdo.engr.washington.edu
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