Intel Core i3-3220 review

Written by Antony Leather

November 26, 2012 | 08:05

Tags: #best-cheap-cpu #core-i3 #ivy-bridge

Companies: #intel

Power Consumption

For all of the performance tests, we disable all power-saving technology in order to give us a consistent set of results, and also best-case performance numbers - even though technologies such as Intel's SpeedStep might only take microseconds to kick in, that can make a difference in some tests.

However, for the power consumption tests we re-enable everything in order to get a real-world power draw. The power draw is measured via a power meter at the wall, so the numbers below are of total system power draw from the mains, not the power consumption of a CPU itself. Measuring the power draw of any individual component in a PC is tricky to impossible to acheive.

Idle Power Consumption

For this test, we leave the PC doing nothing but displaying the Windows 7 desktop (with Aero enabled) for a few minutes and record the wattage drawn from the wall via a power meter.

Power Consumption (Idle)

Windows Aero enabled

  • AMD 5800K
  • AMD 5600K
  • Intel Core i3-3220
  • Intel Core i5-3570K (3.4GHz/5GHz) (discreet GPU)
    • 33
    • 60
    • 33
    • 57
    • 46
    • 0
    • 97
    • 119
0
25
50
75
100
125
Watts, lower is better
  • Stock Speed
  • Overclocked

Load Power Consumption

For this test, we want to only stress the CPU, so use the smallfft stress test of Prime95 to fully load all available processors (logical as well as physical) and load Unegene's Heaven benchmark with the default settings. Wait a few minutes for any power saving technology to kick in and for the power consumption to level out before taking our reading.

Power Consumption (Load)

Unigene Heaven and Prime 95

  • Intel Core i3-3220
  • AMD 5800K
  • AMD 5600K
  • Intel Core i5-3570K (3.4GHz/5GHz) (discreet GPU)
    • 78
    • 0
    • 144
    • 205
    • 153
    • 207
    • 161
    • 267
0
50
100
150
200
250
300
Watts, lower is better
  • Stock Speed
  • Overclocked

Note: the AMD chips were tested in an ATX motherboard, while the Intel LGA1155 chips were tested in a micro-ATX board. This difference can account for up to 20W, as we found in our Energy Efficient Hardware feature.
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