Header Ads

AMD Ryzen Full 17 CPU Lineup Detail

AMD Ryzen Full 17 CPU Lineup Detail


AMD’s entire 17 Ryzen CPU lineup of next generation enthusiast processors due in March has been confirmed and detailed. Each day we’re learning more and more about these highly anticipated processors as we inch ever closer to their official product debut on March 2nd.
Today’s informasi dump is one of many that have occurred over the past few days which included very impressive Ryzen CPU performance benchmarks, new Ryzen CPU coolers in addition to pricing details and exhaustive spec and feature set for the Ryzen 7 1700 8 core CPU. The most recent revelation we’re going to be talking about in this article is one of the most significant of the bunch. 17 different Ryzen CPU models have been confirmed and detailed. We now know how many cores and threads each of them has, their TDP ratings and even the type of coolers that AMD will be providing with each of them. So let’s dig in!

Full AMD Ryzen CPU Lineup Detail

The 17 SKU lineup includes five 8-core CPUs, four 6-core CPUs and eight 4-core CPUs. We have two Black Edition 8-core CPUs, one Black Edition 6-core and two Black Edition 4-core CPUs. The Black Editions feature AMD’s clever Extended Frequency Range technology, otherwise known as XFR.
XFR automatically overclocks Ryzen, allowing it to exceed the default Turbo clock speed whenever the thermal environment allows. We’ve broken down the basics of how this technology works in an article a couple of days back, which you can find here. We also discussed how overclocking Ryzen CPUs will be very different from any previous AMD CPU.
It’s very clear why AMD has decided to bundle Black Editions with the highest performing cooler they have. The better the cooling the higher the CPUs will “auto-overclock” so to speak. It appears that our educated guess regarding the updated Wraith unit — code named “HS81” — has been confirmed. According to the table above, these high-end coolers will in fact be boxed with AMD’s Black Edition 95W Ryzen CPUs. Which include the Ryzen 7 1800X, 1700X and the Ryzen 5 1600X.
Unfortunately, the table does not include any clock speed specifications. However, thanks to information that came out over the past couple of days we’ve been able to confirm the clock speeds for at least three of the chips. The Ryzen 7 1800X, 1700X and 1700.
AMD Ryzen CPUCoresThreadsL3TDPBaseTurboXFR Unlimited TurboPrice
AMD Ryzen 7 1800X81616MB95W3.6GHz4.0GHz4.0Ghz+
Cooling Dependent
$499
AMD Ryzen 7 1700X81616MB95W3.4GHz3.8GHz3.8Ghz+
Cooling Dependent
$389
AMD Ryzen 7 170081616MB65W3.0Ghz3.7GHzNo$319

You’ll Love Ryzen

Among the eight different Ryzen 7 1700X benchmarks that leaked yesterday one in particular paints a very positive picture about Ryzen’s performance in games. When compared with Intel’s $1000+ eight cores the Ryzen 7 1700X showed incredibly competitive performance across a host of different workloads. Including single-threaded performance, which is arguably the most important for games.
It is very true that over the past four to five years we’ve seen many game developers work really hard on parallelizing their game and engine code to take advantage of the multitude of multi-core CPUs on the market. An effort that was primarily driven by the fact that game consoles, which serve as the base on which the industry focuses its optimization efforts, have moved to 8-core AMD Jaguar CPU designs. As a game developer, making sure that your code is optimized to take advantage of multiple cores and threads was no longer a bonus but an absolute necessity.
Due to the nature of a typical gaming workload, one work thread will always be busier than any other running inthe background. Often times in well optimized and parallelized games workloads are very intelligently spread across several threads, making the main game thread only slightly more intensive than others. With that being said, due to how incredibly complex and sporadic modern game worlds are, single threaded performance remains a key factor in how well the game can perform overall.

Huge Improvement Over AMD’s Previous Generation

This is where AMD has really stepped up to the plate with its Zen microarchitecture. Ryzen CPUs are considerably faster core for core and thread for thread compared to AMD’s previous generation. In fact, what the benchmarks tell us is that AMD’s engineering team did in one year what took Intel five to achieve. A whopping 40% improvement in single threaded performance, something unheard of in the industry.
FULL LINE UP
AMD Ryzen CPUCores/ThreadsL3TDPBaseTurboXFRPrice
AMD Ryzen 7 1800X8/1616MB95W3.6GHz4.0GHz4.0GHz+$499
AMD Ryzen 7 1800 Pro8/1616MB65WTBATBAN/ATBA
AMD Ryzen 7 1700X8/1616MB95W3.4GHz3.8GHz3.8GHz+$389
AMD Ryzen 7 17008/1616MB65W3.0GHz3.7GHzN/A$319
AMD Ryzen 5 1600X6/1216MB95W3.3GHz3.7GHz3.7GHz+$259
AMD Ryzen 5 16006/1216MB65WTBATBAN/ATBA
AMD Ryzen 5 15006/1216MB65W3.2GHz3.5GHzN/A$229
AMD Ryzen 5 1400X4/88MB65W3.5GHz3.9GHz3.9GHz+$199
AMD Ryzen 5 14004/88MB65WTBATBAN/ATBA
AMD Ryzen 5 13004/88MB65W3.2GHz3.5GHzN/A$175
AMD Ryzen 3 1200X4/48MB65WTBA3.4GHz3.8GHz$149
AMD Ryzen 3 12004/48MB65WTBATBAN/ATBA
AMD Ryzen 3 11004/48MB65W3.2GHz3.5GHzN/A$129

No comments