Why do all i5 and i7 have same transistor count?

The Tiger

Honorable
Aug 30, 2013
222
2
10,715
1400 million - the magic number! My laptop's i7 3610qm, desktop's i5 3570, as well as my friend's laptop's i5 3210M - all have 1400 million transistors.
According to GPU-z.

How is this possible? They have different speeds, i7 is hyperthreaded vs i5, still why they all have the same number of transistors?

Then why the huge price difference between i5 and i7?

Do i3 also have 1400 million transistors?
 
Solution
Most of them come from the same fab. They just deactivate certain functions on different CPUs. Even so far as deactivating entire cores. In some cases in the past, it was actually possible to reactivate those cores, but they've learned from that - now they usually laser damage the deactivated cores so that trick doesn't work.
Most of them come from the same fab. They just deactivate certain functions on different CPUs. Even so far as deactivating entire cores. In some cases in the past, it was actually possible to reactivate those cores, but they've learned from that - now they usually laser damage the deactivated cores so that trick doesn't work.
 
Solution

The transistors for hyperthreading and so on are still present in the Core i5s, they're just deactivated.
 



Really? Gee! Why do they cut and waste more money like this? Why don't they simply make different chips with fewer transistors?
 
the fabrication process is not 100% efficient which is why there are so many different models and speeds of processors.

the highest end models are often the most expensive also because they are essentially the best binned chips that are mostly flawless.
 


Sometimes during testing, a chip won't run at certain settings correctly (defective cores, bad cache, etc), but fine at lower settings. Rather than throw an otherwise good chip away, they will sell it as a lower level chip. It actually saves them money.

Casey
 


it also save them money by not designing another chip with all the develop/testing/qa and other stuff.