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Snapdragon X2 Elite: Efficiency vs. Power Consumption Benchmark

by Rachel Kim – Technology Editor

Qualcomm snapdragon X2 Elite Outperforms ⁢AMD⁤ and Intel in Efficiency and‍ Power ⁢Tests

Qualcomm’s Snapdragon X2 Elite processor demonstrates leading performance and efficiency‍ in recent testing,⁢ even‍ while consuming over 100W under maximum load. The tests utilize the INPP (Idle-Normalized ​Platform Power) metric, accounting for idle power draw (typically 1-4W) to provide a​ near-total consumption figure.

While the processor reached 103W during testing ‌without a consumption limit – a figure that initially⁤ appears high for an energy-saving processor – Qualcomm emphasizes the⁣ distinction between economy and efficiency. The 18-core Snapdragon X2 Elite achieved ‍over 1970 points at 103W, resulting in an efficiency of ⁣19.1 ⁢points/W. In comparison, ‍the core Ultra​ 9 285H scored around 1170 points at the same 103W consumption (11.4 points/W), and the AMD Ryzen AI 9 HX370 managed approximately 1170 points at 75W (15.6 points/W).

At a more typical laptop⁢ power target of around 40W, the Snapdragon X2 Elite scored approximately⁢ 1430 points.This performance surpasses all other processors tested, even those⁢ without consumption limits. Both AMD and Intel ‍processors finished below 1200 ‌points at this level.

The⁣ 12-core version of the Snapdragon X2 Elite achieved 1080 points at 40W, a result significantly lower ⁢than⁣ the 18-core variant. The AMD Ryzen AI 9 HX370 reached ​1,000 points, while‌ the core ultra⁢ 9 285H (Arrow Lake) achieved ‍around 730 points. Lunar Lake (Core Ultra 9, 288 V) performed the lowest, scoring​ approximately 630 points at 40W.

The performance differences are attributed to the scaling of consumption versus ⁢performance under higher loads. Lunar Lake, limited by its 8⁢ cores, reached its performance ceiling, resulting in a non-linear performance curve.The 18-core Snapdragon, conversely, ​maintained efficiency as⁤ load increased.⁣ This difference in⁢ scaling may also explain the performance gap between the 12 and⁣ 18-core Snapdragon variants, and between 8 and 12-core ⁣Ryzen processors.

Qualcomm notably refrained‌ from direct comparisons with Apple’s M4⁢ Pro or Max processors, which would require testing on a non-Windows platform, raising‍ the question​ of whether they are concerned about potentially losing their leading‍ position.

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