Wednesday, November 2nd 2011

AMD FX 8100 Surfaces on HP Pavilion Desktop

AMD's third 8-core desktop processor model is available through OEMs such as HP. Called the AMD FX-8100, this chip is the most affordable among the available FX-8000 series chips (that's FX-8120 and FX-8150), and according to HP's component pricing, about $80 cheaper than the FX-8150. The AMD FX-8100 is a base model processor option for HP Pavilion HPE h8z desktop. It can be configured to have FX-8150 instead, for $80 over the base price of the desktop, of $830.

The FX-8100, like every other FX Series processor, features an unlocked base clock multiplier to help with overclocking. The chip is clocked at 2.80 GHz, with TurboCore technology, all eight cores can overclock themselves to 3.10 GHz. To handle tasks that aren't multi-threaded, the chip can overclock some of its cores (up to four of them), all the way up to 3.70 GHz. Like every other FX-8000 series chip, the FX-8100 packs 16 MB of total cache (8 MB total L2 + 8 MB L3), features an advanced instruction set of AVX, AES, XOP, SSE 4.2/4.1/4a, and a system interface of 5.2 GT/s with HyperTransport 3.1.
Source: CPU World
Add your own comment

13 Comments on AMD FX 8100 Surfaces on HP Pavilion Desktop

#1
btarunr
Editor & Senior Moderator
Many Thanks to TRWOV for the tip.
Posted on Reply
#2
entropy13
And its an FX-6100 for the HP Pavilion HPE h8m series.
Posted on Reply
#3
HossHuge
So does HP actually let you O/C the cpu? I didn't think they did that on pre-builds.
Posted on Reply
#4
purecain
i can see virtually every cheap psu blowing... i wouldnt like to be in charge of hp's returns dept.
Posted on Reply
#5
Zubasa
purecaini can see virtually every cheap psu blowing... i wouldnt like to be in charge of hp's returns dept.
The FX doesn't use that much power on stock. These pre-builds usually have some crappy graphics cards in them anyways.
So some 300W PSU can easily power the thing.
Posted on Reply
#6
Super XP
Even minor bumps in Overclock don't suck back power such as a few may suggest.
Posted on Reply
#7
erocker
*
Super XPEven minor bumps in Overclock don't suck back power such as a few may suggest.
What do you mean? Generally, minor bumps in overclock won't need added voltage anyways.
Posted on Reply
#8
crazyeyesreaper
Not a Moderator
yea power consumption wasnt all that bad on your chip was it erocker. at least not untill you pushed past 4.2 and then it skyrocketed.
Posted on Reply
#9
Super XP
erockerWhat do you mean? Generally, minor bumps in overclock won't need added voltage anyways.
Yes that was my point from one of the posters. In other words, yes you can OC the CPU to a certain extent without adding volts.
Posted on Reply
#10
eidairaman1
The Exiled Airman
Turbo Core Function should be enabled in OEMs but ability to overclock yourself shouldnt be. Myself will never buy an OEM machine.
Posted on Reply
#11
suraswami
The 8100 is going to OC only if there are OC functions provided in the mobo like voltage adjustment, NB, HTT etc. The mobo would be a locked down one that will work upto say 125w. Few multi change is not going to blow the mobo or the PSU.
Posted on Reply
#12
eidairaman1
The Exiled Airman
for an OEM machine, it be best to lock it down, I do for those users that i build machines for, keep them from messing up settings
Posted on Reply
#13
[H]@RD5TUFF
Wonder if these will come in non OEM flavors.
Posted on Reply
Add your own comment
Apr 24th, 2024 01:20 EDT change timezone

New Forum Posts

Popular Reviews

Controversial News Posts