Yesterday MediaTek announced the successor to last year's Helio P10. The Helio P10 was announced back in June with devices being announced and released in the following months. Even though the SoC is only 8 months old it still looks like MediaTek is keeping up the pace and looking forward with the new P20. 

MediaTek 2016 H1 Lineup
SoC MediaTek
Helio X20
(MT6797)
MediaTek
Helio X10
(MT6795)
MediaTek
Helio P20
MediaTek
Helio P10
(MT6755)
CPU 4x Cortex A53 @1.4GHz

4x Cortex A53 @2.0GHz

2x Cortex A72
@2.5GHz
4x Cortex A53 @2.2GHz

4x Cortex A53 @2.2GHz
4x Cortex A53
@?GHz

4x Cortex A53 @2.3GHz
4x Cortex A53
@1.1GHz

4x Cortex A53 @2.0GHz
Memory
Controller
2x 32-bit @ 933MHz
LPDDR3

14.9GB/s b/w
2x 32-bit @ 933MHz
LPDDR3

14.9GB/s b/w
2x 16-bit @1600MHz
LPDDR4X

or alternatively

1x 32-bit @ 933 LPDDR3

12.8GB/s or 7.4GB/s
b/w
1x 32-bit @933MHz
LPDDR3

7.4GB/s b/w
GPU Mali T880MP4
@700MHz
PowerVR G6200
@700MHz
Mali T880MP2
@900MHz
Mali T860MP2
@700MHz
Encode/
Decode
2160p30 10-bit
H.264/HEVC/VP9
decode

2160p30
HEVC w/HDR
encode
2160p30 10-bit
H.264/HEVC/VP9
decode

2160p30
HEVC
encode
2160p30
H.264 & HEVC
decode

2160p30
H.264
encode
1080p30
H.264 & HEVC
decode

1080p30
H.264
encode
Camera/ISP Dual ISP
32MP @ 24fps
21MP single or
16MP + 8MP dual
24MP single or
13MP + 13MP dual
21MP single or
16MP + 8MP dual
Integrated
Modem
 LTE Cat. 6
300Mbps DL
50Mbps UL

2x20MHz C.A. 
(DL)
LTE Cat. 4 
150Mbps DL 50Mbps UL
 LTE Cat. 6
300Mbps DL
50Mbps UL

2x20MHz C.A. 
(DL)
 LTE Cat. 6
300Mbps DL
50Mbps UL

2x20MHz C.A. 
(DL)
 
Mfc. Process 20SoC 28HPM 16nm FinFET 28HPC+

Going over the specifications what we see is a slight increase in frequency on the 8 Cortex A53 cores. Although we currently lack details on the clocks of the efficiency cluster, we can disclose that the performance cluster is now clocked in at 2.3GHz instead of 2.0. On the GPU side the Mali T860MP2 has been upgraded to a T880MP2 and clocks have been raised 200MHz to 900MHz. 

Due to the lack of a big core CPU cluster or wide GPU configuration, it seems clear that the P20 is still aiming at more conservative and low-power performance targets while trying to keep the cost of the SoC down.


Source: Samsung Semiconductor @ Qualcomm 3G LTE 2015 Summit

An interesting addition is the integration of a new memory controller which is capable of LPDDR4X memory. LPDDR4X is a new standard which was finalized late last year and represents an evolution over LPDDR4 promising to improve power efficiency. This is done by lowering the VDDQ voltage of the memory down to 0.6V, which more than halve the output driver power and cuts overall total memory power by 20%.

The multimedia blocks see some enhancement in their capabilities and can now decode and encode in 4K, although the encoder is still limited to H.264 and thus lacks HEVC capability. The ISP has also seen upgrades and now has more processing power to support up to 24MP single cameras or 13+13MP dual cameras.

Finally, the biggest news here is that the P20 is manufactured on a 16nm FinFET node. The last weeks has seen a flurry of mid-range FinFET SoCs announced and this now marks MediaTek as the third vendor after Qualcomm and Samsung LSI to release a mid-range product on a high-end manufacturing process. Here at MWC we were able to have a chat with Executive Vice President and Co-Chief Operating Officer at MediaTek Jeffrey Ju and we were told to expect some 'outstanding' power efficiency from the P20.

Commercial devices with the P20 are reported to start shipping in the second half of 2016.

 

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  • jjj - Tuesday, February 23, 2016 - link

    Now the only one left to report in is the Spreadtrum that seems to have forced the others to do this.
    Will be odd to see mid range with 6GB LPDDR4x in the same year as flagships with 4GB LPDDR4.
    If you talk again with Mediatek, maybe ask them if they don't see a hole in their roadmap between P20 and X20, SD65x and all...
  • hojnikb - Tuesday, February 23, 2016 - link

    someone should make a x2 A35+ x2 A72 SoC. A35 cores for light tasks and A72 for demading tasks.

    8 semi crappy cores just make no sense. Well great for marketing.
  • nikaldro - Wednesday, February 24, 2016 - link

    Despite what many know-it-alls say, 8 cores aren't useless.
  • bug77 - Wednesday, February 24, 2016 - link

    The how do iPhones score towards the top of many multi-core benchmarks while having 2-3 cores?

    (I'm no Apple fan, but the engineer in me cannot ignore this "oddity")
  • nikaldro - Thursday, February 25, 2016 - link

    Different OS, different HW.
    iOS apps are obviously made to use only 2 cores, since iphones only have 2 cores.
    In turn, since Apple SoCs only have 2 cores, they can afford to make those 2 cores big and fast.
    The end result is that iphones are fast. Very fast.
  • testbug00 - Thursday, February 25, 2016 - link

    Apple is in a position where they aren't competing on price so they have no need to have as many cores as the competition (8 core phenomenon is mostly because you need 8 cores to be seen as competitive in many places) AND they can afford to spend a lot of die area on making big cores and GPUs.

    Apple's cores are VERY powerful per Mhz. They are pretty close to Intel's big cores.
  • theqnology - Monday, February 29, 2016 - link

    Do you mean in size? :) Apple cores are also huge.
  • theqnology - Monday, February 29, 2016 - link

    People keep forgetting that Apple cores are huge. The reason they can have such power with that level of efficiency. They can put as much optimized logic as they want in the chip, because they also control the OS, thus they don't need to hit higher "sub-optimal voltage-wise" clock rates to get the performance.
  • rednafi - Friday, March 25, 2016 - link

    They aren't on the top of any multicore score bench.But they are on the top of many single core bench.Apple's a9 houses their own cpu architecture that has higher IPC than its ARM equivalent.Besides apple has higher optimization for their software since they only have to make software for their specific hardware.The benchmark apps are also optimized for running on ios.Thats why iphones has higher single core scores.But since A9 has only two cores, snapdragon 820,exynos 7420 or 8880 blows it away in multicore scores
  • sseemaku - Wednesday, February 24, 2016 - link

    You mean not all 8 are useless? Or did you mean it can be used for scientific applications development!

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