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AMD attempts to track down overheating Opterons

Stephen Shankland CNET News

Published: 02 May 2006 10:55 BST

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Advanced Micro Devices is trying to track down and replace as many as 3,000 Opteron processors that could produce "inconsistent results" under an unusual, high-temperature circumstance.

The potential problem affects a number of single-core Opteron 152, 154, 252, 254, 852 and 854 processors manufactured in late 2005 or early 2006, AMD said on Friday. The company hasn't seen the problem in production use, but has seen it in a test that combines high processor temperature, high outside temperature, and a large number of floating-point mathematical computations.

AMD said it has added a new screening process at its manufacturing plants to put affected chips into a lower speed category. For example, a 2.8GHz model won't exhibit the problem when running at 2.6GHz, AMD said.

AMD is working with computer makers to track down the chips and is offering free replacements.

The chipmaker has made PC processors for years, but only in 2003 entered the server market with the Opteron chip. Since the Opteron's debut, AMD has steadily gained share against Intel's Xeon, which previously had the vast x86 server market to itself, but Intel is working to become more competitive. Opteron's performance advantages has won it a place in servers from Sun Microsystems, Hewlett-Packard and IBM.

After AMD confirmed the problem, it determined the chips had fallen through a "test escape" -- a situation in which a flawed chip passes all tests. In other words, the company says the problem lies in testing, not in manufacturing or design.

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