The tests on the Apollo core website are all done on the same Arria board. The efficiency of the Apollo core is very good.
If you are talking about the performance benchmarks here:
http://www.apollo-core.com/index.htm?page=performanceThen the fpga is a Stratix which is significantly faster and more expensive than the Arria. Some of the Arria fpgas are borderline affordable but generally the Cyclone series gives better bang for the buck and there are sizes that are large enough for everything an Amiga would need.
All the benchmarks here:
http://www.apollo-core.com/bringup/show results for Majsta's accelerator with a tiny Cyclone II fpga. Some of the benchmark MHz numbers given are calculated by performance (some benchmark programs are not accurate).
A 120 MHz board will be faster than an overclock on a 68060 board by more than 20% and cost less as well.
You must be referring to the new sandwich accelerator with larger fpga. Yes, Phoenix in it should be better at integer performance than a 68060. Phoenix in Majsta's accelerator is probably more equivalent in performance to a 68040 at 120-160MHz. It's going to perform better with old 68000-68040 code than the 68060 which needs optimizations to fully take advantage of superscalar execution. Phoenix is handicapped severely by the small Cyclone II but it still approaches the integer performance of a 68060@50MHz and no doubt outperforms it in some areas.
would be nice if a-eon would get on board and try to push through a amiga fpga-clone so the amiga community could have also more choices and also we dont forget the classic amiga.
If A-Eon had invested $1 million in Natami and burning an ASIC based on the Phoenix fpga CPU core, the 68k wouldn't be the slow poke anymore. I bet an ASIC could outperform a SAM 440 while being compatible with most of the old 68k software. It's interesting that the problems with SMP (exec/ables.i macros) are more likely solvable in an fpga (or Phoenix+Amiga ASIC) than with a PPC based AmigaOS. It wouldn't be too difficult to add multi-threading and/or more cores (the hardware side but the software side could be tricky) with Phoenix. A lot of Amiga users like the 68k with compatibility and won't abandon it.