During AMD’s ‘together we advance_PCs’ event at the end of August, the company unveiled its Ryzen 7000 series of desktop processors, with four SKUs aimed at the mid-range and high-end market segments. After whetting the audience's appetites with that announcement, tomorrow AMD will be officially releasing their long-awaited next-generation CPUs.

The launch of the Ryzen 7000 series brings a lot to digest, for casual fans and hardcore hardware enthusiasts alike. For their newest lineup of chips, AMD has given their desktop CPU platform a top-to-bottom update, not only releasing new CPUs, but releasing an entirely new platform, socket AM5 around it. As a result, for the first time in a few generations these chips are not drop-in compatible with existing AMD motherboards. But at the same time it has allowed AMD to deliver on a collection of platform improvements, ranging from DDR5 and PCIe 5.0 support to improved power management capabilities. AMD has even managed to sneak an entry-level Radeon RDNA2 architecture-based iGPU into the chip.

The Ryzen 9 7950X: 16 Cores, 32 Threads, New 170 W TDP: $699

We'll start, as always, with the CPUs themselves. AMD's flagship for this generation is the Ryzen 9 7950X, a 16 Zen 4 core CPU that AMD is looking to top the charts with for both single-threaded and multi-threaded workloads. The Ryzen 9 7950X has a base frequency of 4.5 GHz and a peak turbo clockspeed of 5.7 GHz, which makes it the highest clocked desktop x86 CPU to hit the market yet.

But don't think AMD's Zen 4 architecture is just about clockspeeds. AMD has also improved the IPC of their CPU architecture by an average of 13% – primarily relying on the addition of AVX-512 instruction support and comfortably larger caches and buffers throughout the CPU – which means that the Ryzen 7000 chips can deliver some significant performance improvements in a variety of single-threaded workloads.

As for multi-threaded workloads, AMD has been able to improve performance there as well, albeit with a reliance on both architecture improvements and higher TDPs to allow for higher sustained clockspeeds. One of the enabling factors here is that the AM5 platform allows for higher chip TDPs – up to 170W in the case of the 7950X – which is some 65W higher than the max TDPs on AMD's fastest 16 core Ryzen 5000 parts. As a result AMD is in a good position to deliver on the "leadership" class performance that the company is after, but not entirely for free.

The Ryzen 9 7900X, Ryzen 7 7700X, and Ryzen 5 7600X

Moving one down the stack is the Ryzen 9 7900X, which is a 12C/24T and 170W TDP part; it has a higher base frequency than the 7950X of 4.7 GHz, but with a slightly lower boost frequency of up to 5.6 GHz.

Below that, AMD has launched one Ryzen 7 part designed for mid-range desktop computing, the Ryzen 7 7700X. This is an 8C/16T SKU, with a boost frequency on a single core of up to 5.4 GHz, and a base frequency of 4.5 GHz. Notably, unlike the Ryzen 9 parts, this part has a more typical-for-AMD TDP of 105W.

Finally, also aimed at the mid-range market and the cheapest member of AMD's new product stack, we have the Ryzen 5 7600X. Offering 6C/12T with a TDP of 105W, the 7600X is Zen 4 at a more reasonable price point. The chip runs at a base frequency of 4.7 GHz, with a modest (compared to Ryzen 9) boost frequency on a single core of 5.3 GHz.

AMD Ryzen 7000 versus Ryzen 5000
AnandTech Cores
Threads
Base
Freq
Turbo
Freq
Memory
Support
L3
Cache
TDP MSRP
Ryzen 9 7950X 16C / 32T 4.5GHz 5.7GHz DDR5-5200 64 MB 170 W $699
Ryzen 9 5950X 16C / 32T 3.4 GHz 4.9 GHz DDR4-3200 64 MB 105 W $799
 
Ryzen 9 7900X 12C / 24T 4.7GHz 5.6GHz DDR5-5200 64 MB 170 W $549
Ryzen 9 5900X 12C / 24T 3.7 GHz 4.8 GHz DDR4-3200 64 MB 105 W $549
 
Ryzen 7 7700X 8C / 16T 4.5GHz 5.4GHz DDR5-5200 32 MB 105 W $399
Ryzen 7 5800X 8C / 16T 3.8 GHz 4.7 GHz DDR4-3200 32 MB 105 W $449
 
Ryzen 5 7600X 6C / 12T 4.7GHz 5.3GHz DDR5-5200 32 MB 105 W $299
Ryzen 5 5600X 6C / 12T 3.7 GHz 4.6 GHz DDR4-3200 32 MB 65 W $299
 

Comparing apples to apples, so to speak, between the new Ryzen 7000 series parts to the previous-generation Ryzen 5000 series parts, Ryzen 7000 has made some big overall improvements to the chips' capabilities. All of the Ryzen 7000 chips offer significant increases in both base and boost frequencies, which bodes well for overall performance. The worst we can say is that AMD hasn't increased their core counts at any price point/market segment, so all of the performance gains we'll see here today are entirely from architecture and clockspeeds, rather than the more immediate MT gains of throwing more silicon at the matter.

AMD's performance gains have been made possible in part through the Zen 4 architecture's superior power efficiency. While the Zen 4 architecture is modest refinement of Zen 3, delivering a 13% IPC improvement, it also gets the big advantage of being produced on TSMC's 5 nm process node, a full node's shrink from the TSMC 7nm process that was used for Ryzen 5000/3000. This efficiency has allowed AMD to boost clockspeeds without breaking the power bank, with the 105W TDP 7700X seeing a 700MHz improvement for no change in TDP. And multi-threaded performance is not left out in the cold, either; by increasing their top TDP to 170W, AMD is able to keep the CPU cores on their 12C and 16C parts at higher sustained turbo clocks, delivering much better performance there as well.

Of course one of the key arguments here is that more power calls for more cooling, which is very much true for the Ryzen 7000 series. Ryzen 7000’s TjMax for its Precision Boost Overdrive technology stands at 95°C, which means that the CPU will use all of the available thermal headroom right up to that point in order to maximize performance.

Although this can be overridden when manually overclocking, none the less the top-end Ryzen 7000 chips call for better cooling than their Ryzen 5000 counterparts. Users will need to employ more premium and aggressive coolers to squeeze every last drop of performance from Zen 4, as most of us are wont to do. AMD for their part has accounted for all of this with their design choices and product marketing, clearly advising Ryzen 9 79x0 owners to use a liquid cooler with these chips. Still, this does mean that AMD is not bundling their own CPU coolers with their retail SKUs, instead directing buyers to fairly powerful third-party coolers.

New AM5 Socket: AM4 Coolers will Support AM5 Too

AMD has also transitioned to a new platform for Ryzen 7000, named AM5. Along with AM5 also comes a new socket, the titular socket AM5, a LGA-1718 socket that is AMD's first use of the LGA form factor for mainstream desktop CPUs. Now what’s interesting is AMD has specified that most AM4 coolers will support the new AM5 socket, which is great for keeping compatibility with existing coolers.

This also means that AM4 is slowly on its way to becoming a thing of the past. While AMD is still (many) months away from replacing their complete Ryzen 4000/5000 stack with Ryzen 7000 parts, today is the first day and the first step to doing so. None the less, AM4 does offer some incredible deals right now (e.g. 5800X3D), as well as support for cheaper DDR4 memory. This sits in contrast to the AM5 platform, which is entirely DDR5-only. Though when it comes to memory AMD does have a small advantage over Intel; whereas Intel's 12th Gen Core chips only support a maximum (JEDEC) speed of DDR5-4800, the Ryzen 7000 chips are officially rated for DDR5-5200.

To go with the new AM5 platform and provide motherboards for their new CPUs, AMD has unveiled four(ish) new chipsets. These are the B650 and X670, as well as their "Extreme" variations, the B650E and X670E. The top-end X670E series will feature both PCIe 5.0 lanes to the top PEG slot and support for PCIe 5.0 NVMe storage devices. The regular X670 chipset, on the other hand, foregoes the mandatory PCIe 5.0 speeds for the PEG slot in favor of easier-to-implement PCIe 4.0. In either case, both versions of X670 are intended to offer a plethora of I/O options, and in keeping with the general tiered structure of AMD's AM5 chipsets, X670 boards will generally offer better designs, better controllers, and better specifications.

The B650 chipsets, meanwhile, are designed to be more affordable, doing away with some of the I/O lanes and overall I/O flexibility the X670 chipsets enjoy. Like the Extreme X670, the B650E is intended for boards that will offer PCIe 5.0 to the PEG slot and NVMe storage. Otherwise, the lowest-tier B650 chipset dials that back to PCIe 4.0 for the PEG slot as well.

For this week's launch, only the X670/X670E boards will be available. Buyers looking for the cheaper B650/B650E boards will need to hold out until October.

New I/O Die: TSMC 6nm For Ryzen 7000

Last, as has been the case for the last couple of Ryzen desktop generations, for the Ryzen 7000 series AMD is constructing their CPUs out of chiplets. All Ryzen 7000 desktop chips are built from an I/O Die (IOD) as well as either one or two core complex dies (CCDs) depending on the SKU. The IOD hosts all of the PCIe 5.0 lanes, the DDR5 integrated memory controller (IMC), and new for Ryzen 7000, an integrated GPU based on AMD's Radeon RDNA2 GPU architecture. All things considered, the IOD used for the Ryzen 7000 is a pretty significant overhaul compared to AMD's previous IOD, with AMD implementing several new performance and power-saving features, as well as further cutting down on power consumption thanks to TSMC's 6nm process.

It’s time to dive deep into all of AMD’s new improvements and changes for its Zen 4 microarchitecture. Over the following pages we’ll, be going over the following:

  1. Ryzen 7000 Overview: Comparing Ryzen 7000 to Ryzen 5000 specifications
  2. Socket AM5: The New Platform For Consumer AMD
  3. More I/O For AM5: PCIe 5, Additional PCIe Lanes, & More Displays
  4. AM5 Chipsets: X670 and B650, Built by ASMedia
  5. DDR5 & AMD EXPO Memory: Memory Overclocking, AMD’s Way
  6. Ryzen 7000 I/O Die: TSMC & Integrated Graphics at Last
  7. Zen 4 Architecture: Power Efficiency, Performance, & New Instructions
  8. Zen 4 Execution Pipeline: Familiar Pipes With More Caching
  9. Test Bed and Setup
  10. Core-to-Core Latency
  11. SPEC2017 Single-Threaded Results
  12. SPEC2017 Multi-Threaded Results
  13. CPU Benchmark Performance: Power, Web, & Science
  14. CPU Benchmark Performance: Simulation and Encoding
  15. CPU Benchmark Performance: Rendering
  16. CPU Benchmark Performance: Legacy Tests
  17. Gaming Performance: 720p and Lower
  18. Gaming Performance: 1080p
  19. Gaming Performance: 4K
  20. Conclusion
Socket AM5: The New Platform for Consumer AMD
POST A COMMENT

205 Comments

View All Comments

  • Oxford Guy - Tuesday, September 27, 2022 - link

    This has been posted for years. Reply
  • BoredInPDX - Tuesday, September 27, 2022 - link

    I’m confused. I they 720p tests you write:
    “All gaming tests here were run using integrated graphics, with a variation of 720p resolutions and at minimum settings.”

    Yet all the prior-gen AMD CPUs tested are lacking an IGP. Am I missing something?
    Reply
  • Ryan Smith - Friday, September 30, 2022 - link

    You are not missing anything; we did not run any iGPU tests. That's a bit of boilerplate text that did not get scrubbed from this article. Thanks for bringing it up! Reply
  • Gigaplex - Wednesday, September 28, 2022 - link

    There's some odd results here and the article commentary doesn't seem to touch on it. Why is the 7600X absolutely trounced in Geekbench 4.0 MT? The second slowest CPU (3600XT) more than doubles it. And yet the 7950X wins by a mile in that same test, so it shouldn't be architectural. And in some of the gaming tests, the 7600X wins, and in some it comes dead last. Reply
  • Dribble - Wednesday, September 28, 2022 - link

    The processors are particularly cache bound - i.e. it fits in cache it runs very fast, if it doesn't it falls off rapidly. That is often visible in games where it'll run amazingly in some (mostly older) games, but tend to fall off, particularly in the lows, in more complex (mostly newer) games. Reply
  • ricebunny - Wednesday, September 28, 2022 - link

    The SPEC multithreaded tests are N separate instantiations of the single thread tests. That’s a perfect scenario where there is no dependency or serialization in the workload and tells us very little how the CPUs would perform in a parallel workload application. There are SPEC tests specifically designed to test parallel performance, but I do not see them included in this report. Anandtech, can you comment on this? Reply
  • abufrejoval - Wednesday, September 28, 2022 - link

    Emerging dGPUs not supporting PCIe 5.0 is just crippleware!

    While I can easily see that 16 lanes of PCIe 5.0 won't do much for any game, I can very much see what I'd do with the 8 lanes left over when all dGPU bandwidth requirements can be met with just 8 lanes of PCIe 5.0.

    Why can't they just be good PCIe citizens and negotiate to use 16 lanes of PCIe 4.0 on lesser or previous generation boards and optimize lane allocation on higher end PCIe 5.0 systems that can then use bifurcation to add say a 100Gbit NIC, plenty of Thunderbolt 4 or better yet, something CXL?

    Actually I'd be really astonished if this wasn't even an artifical cap and that the Nvidia chips may actually be able to do PCIe 5.0.

    It's just that they'd much rather have people use NVlink.
    Reply
  • TheinsanegamerN - Tuesday, October 4, 2022 - link

    Um....dude, 4.0x16 and 5.0x8 have the same bandwidth, and no GPU today can saturate 4.0, not even close. The 300ti OCed manages to saturate.....2.0. 3.0 is a whopping 7% faster.

    You got awhile man.
    Reply
  • abufrejoval - Wednesday, September 28, 2022 - link

    It should be interesting to see if AMD is opening the architecture for 3rd parties to exploit the actual potential of the Ryzen 7000 chips.

    The current mainboard/slot era that dates back to the 1981 IBM-PC (or the Apple ][) really is coming to an end and perhaps few things highlight this as well as a 600 Watt GPU that has a 65 Watt mainboard hanging under it.

    We may really need something more S100 or VME, for those old enough to understand that.

    Thunderbolt cables handle 4 lanes of PCIe 3.0 today and AFAIK cables are used for much higher lane counts and PCIe revisions within high-end server chassis today, even if perhaps at shorter lengths and with connectors designed for somewhat less (especially less frequent) pluggability.

    Their main advantage is vastly reduced issues with mainboard traces and much better use of 3D space to optimize air flow cooling.

    Sure those cables aren't cheap, but perhaps the cross-over point for additional PCB layers has been passed. And optical interconnects are waiting in the wings: they will use cables, too.

    You stick PCIe 5.0 x4 fixed length cables out from all sides of an AM5 socket and connect those either to high bandwidth devices (e.g. dGPU) or a switch (PCIe 5.0 variant of the current ASMedia), you get tons of flexibility and expandability in a box form factor, that may not resemble an age old PC very much, but deliver tons of performance and expandability in a deskside form factor.

    You want to recycle all your nice PCIe 3.0 2TB NVMe drives? Just add a board that puts a PCIe 5.0 20 lane switch between (even PCIe 4.0 might do fine if it's 50% $$$).

    And if your dGPU actually needs 8 lanes of PCIe 5.0 to deliver top performance, connect two of those x4 cables to undo a bit of bifurcation!

    How those cable connected board would then mount in a chassis and be cooled across a large range of form factors and power ranges is up for lots of great engineers to solve, while dense servers may already provide lots of the design bricks.

    Unfortunately all that would require AMD to open up the base initialization code and large parts of the BIOS, which I guess currently has the ASmedia chip(s) pretty much hardwired into it.

    And AMD with all their "we don't do artificial market segmentation" publicity in the past, seem to have become far more receptive to its bottom line benefits recently, to allow a free transition from console to PC/workstation and servers of all sizes.

    And it would take a high-volume vendor (or AMD itself), a client side Open Compute project or similar to push that form factor the the scale where it becomes economically viable.

    It's high time for a PC 2.0 (which isn't a PS/2) to bridge into the CXL universe even on desktops and workstations.
    Reply
  • Oxford Guy - Wednesday, September 28, 2022 - link

    "The current mainboard/slot era that dates back to the 1981 IBM-PC (or the Apple ][)"

    Absolutely nothing about the IBM PC was new. The Micral N introduced slots in a microcomputer and the S-100 bus, introduced by the Altair, became the first big standard.
    Reply

Log in

Don't have an account? Sign up now