Final Words

The prospect of dual core usually meant that you had to give up some single-threaded performance, but with the Athlon 64 FX-60, that tradeoff is no longer true. While it's still not clocked as high as the fastest single core processor, it is extremely close. It's close enough that the difference in clock speed makes single-threaded performance a non-issue.

The fact that the FX-60 and FX-57 are almost at a clock speed parity is important because it does mean that we are getting beyond the inflection point of the dual core/single core transition. The high end dual core chips are all but caught up to the high end single core chips of just six months ago. Intel still has a little way to go before the same is true for them, but with the FX-60, it does hold true for AMD.

Unfortunately, since the FX-60 is still built on the same 90nm Toledo core as the previous X2 processors, overclocking headroom is not that great. With a retail AMD heatsink/fan, the best that we could do is 2.8GHz at 1.40V. With more exotic cooling, you could probably manage better, but stepping up the voltage all the way up to 1.50V wouldn't yield a 3GHz overclock on air.

Setting records in Winstone, SYSMark and WorldBench, it's clear that for all of your desktop applications, you can't get any faster than the Athlon 64 FX-60. Granted, the performance advantage over the X2 4800+ is generally in the 5% - 9% range, so it's up to you to decide whether or not the advantage is worth it.
Then there's the issue of AMD's upcoming Socket-AM2; due out in another few months, you obviously won't be able to use any Socket-939 processors in the new motherboards and there will be no upgrade path beyond the FX-60 for current 939 owners. So, our recommendation would be to stay away from the FX-60 unless you absolutely have to build the world's fastest system today.

If the latter is true, then you can't go wrong with the FX-60; if not, however, you'll be better off waiting for AM2.

Gaming Performance using Battlefield 2, Call of Duty 2 and Quake 4
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  • AnandThenMan - Tuesday, January 10, 2006 - link

    What no overclocking tests. ARE YOU KIDDING ME? The thing is totally unlocked! What the hell.
  • ViRGE - Tuesday, January 10, 2006 - link

    It's the same Toledo core as the rest of the 1MB X2's, I doubt it would overclock much better in the first place.
  • Anand Lal Shimpi - Tuesday, January 10, 2006 - link

    With a retail AMD heatsink/fan, the best we could do is 2.8GHz at 1.40V. With more exotic cooling you could probably manage better, but stepping up the voltage all the way up to 1.50V wouldn't yield a 3GHz overclock on air.

    I'm going to update the article with the results, I meant to have them in the conclusion initially but it slipped my mind when posting.

    Take care,
    Anand
  • ckbrame - Tuesday, January 10, 2006 - link

    Where can I get one woot woot!

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