Processor | Cores | Threads | Base Clock | Comparable Perf |
---|---|---|---|---|
AMD R7 1800X | 8 | 16 | 3.0 - 3.6 GHz | Core i7 6900K |
AMD R7 Pro 1800 | 8 | 16 | 3.0 - 3.6 GHz | |
AMD R7 1700X | 8 | 16 | 3.0 - 3.6 GHz | Core i7 7700K/6800K |
AMD R7 1700 | 8 | 16 | 3.0 - 3.6 GHz | Core i7 7700 |
AMD R7 Pro 1700 | 8 | 16 | 3.0 - 3.6 GHz | |
AMD R5 1600X | 6 | 12 | 3.2 - 3.5 GHz | Core i5 7600K |
AMD R5 Pro 1600 | 6 | 12 | 3.2 - 3.5 GHz | Core i5 7600 |
AMD R5 1500 | 6 | 12 | 3.2 - 3.5 GHz | Core i5 7500 |
AMD R5 Pro 1500 | 6 | 12 | 3.2 - 3.5 GHz | |
AMD R5 1400X | 4 | 8 | 3.2 - 3.5 GHz | Core i5 7400 |
AMD R5 Pro 1400 | 4 | 8 | 3.2 - 3.5 GHz | |
AMD R5 1300 | 4 | 8 | 3.2 - 3.5 GHz | |
AMD R5 Pro 1300 | 4 | 8 | 3.2 - 3.5 GHz | |
AMD R3 1200X | 4 | 4 | 3.1 - 3.4 GHz | |
AMD R3 Pro 1200 | 4 | 4 | 3.1 - 3.4 GHz | |
AMD R3 1100 | 4 | 4 | 3.1 - 3.4 GHz | |
AMD R3 Pro 1100 | 4 | 4 | 3.1 - 3.4 GHz |
AMD Ryzen R7, R5 and R3 Processor Line-up listed
Ah yes, a new day a new Ryzen related post! This one is fairly tasty and interesting though as website coolaler is listing the complete line up of AMD Ryzen processors, including names.
Previously we have talked about the R7, R5 and R3 denominators comparable to Core i3, i5 and i7 for the Ryzen product range. From what Coolaler (with an unknown source I would like to add) is listing there will be 17 models released 8C/16T, 6C/12T, 4C/8T, 4C/4T yet weirdly enough, not a 8C/8T. And yes that reads as the number of cores and threads.
AMD R7 is the 8C/16T series with 5 models: R7 1800X, R7 PRO 1800, R7 1700X, R7 1700, R7 PRO 1700 we guess is X is the identifier for unlocked.
Also the the PRO extension is unclear. Final R7 clocks frequencies are unknown but Coolaler is listing 3.0GHz ~ 3.6GHz for the base clocks with we assume up-to 4.0 GHz boost/turbo clocks.
The more mainstream AMD R5 range will see 6C12T and 4C8T processors. Two of the four from a total of 8 models, including R5 1600X, R5 PRO 1600, R5 1500, R5 PRO 1500, R5 1400X, R5 PRO 1400, R5 1300, R5 PRO 1300, you can see an X Version for the 1600 and 1400. Baseclocks will start at 3.2GHz up-to 3.5GHz, with unspecified Turbo frequencies.
Then there is the more entry level AMD R3 range with is 4C4T. Four are the R3 1200X, R3 PRO 1200, R3 1100, R3 PRO 1100, there is one X version, the base clock is 3.1 ~ 3.4GHz with unspecified turbos. Not bad for entry level processors starting at quad core. It does confirm the fact that there will not be any dual-core processors.
From the looks of it AMD Ryzen will become available March 2. All information in this news item remains speculation as we cannot verify how coolaler has obtained this info. Thanks chispy for the news-submit.
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Noctua offers free upgrade-kits for AMD Ryzen platform - 01/25/2017 06:23 PM
Here is why we all love Noctua, they will provide users of its CPU coolers with free mounting upgrade kits for the new AM4 socket of AMD's upcoming Ryzen archiitecture. The SecuFirm2 mounting-kits ar...
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hope it's real competitive cpu...

Senior Member
Posts: 6640
Joined: 2010-08-27
I really hope they get the pricing right. It's okay if there are enthusiast variations of the 8 core/16 thread that cost more, since their target audience is the extreme clocker, but for mainstread the standard 8 core/16 thread CPU's need to be very competitively priced. I would think the top mainstream CPU would be slightly less than the i7-7700K, simply because it needs to be an attractive preposition for people. AMD simply cannot equal value/performance with Intel, they need to effectively quash them.
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I think that it should be "Price Point" comparison and not Performance.
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Joined: 2012-04-30
its funny, how many people instantly assume its a performance chart,
and say ryzen is a "bad" cpu (vs intel), only to turn around and then say "its a fake list".
since amd vs intel, how many times was amd actually ahead in performance?
how many years did they beat intel in price?
the fact that almost all "official" tests we've seen so far point towards "almost as fast.." (as intel), makes me think this is a PRICE based comparison.
Given amds market is mainly with lower priced machines/customers, this makes completely sense, as its a great way to get ppl to switch, as i get almost same ipc as intel, maybe even with more cores, at lower price.
and exactly what i've been waiting for, as im not willing to shell out 400$ for a (old) 5820,
even that i've seen some in-store offers around 300ish, i still prefer to either spend less (same cores), or the same and get a 8/16 cpu.
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Or, like, it's the only way to convince people with an Intel fetish to maybe even consider an AMD CPU again. If it is correct, this seems to be a price chart, not a performance chart. All indications show that Zen cores have similar IPC to Broadwell-E cores, and there are hints that when they are working together they are doing so in a better way than the Intel cores. Although I probably won't upgrade my CPU yet (my GPU is the first one to change), I hope that Zen is what it seems to be up to this point.
From the Intel financial report at Deutsche Bank (read it, it's interesting for a lot of things), I got the feeling that Intel has really nothing to actually compete with it until Cannonlake.
Observe the language. He's basically telling them: This is a risky business, there are competitive risks. Then he goes into defensive mode saying "we don't care what they do", then he says that they have the highest performance product, but he gives no nuance to it, like, what does he mean? They have the fastest product per core? The product with the most cores? A 48-core Xeon will be faster than the 32-core Naples, if he means it this way. And a quad core i7 will probably be faster than a quad core Zen, so yeah, they will have the "faster product". Then he ends up by saying that their own 2017 roadmap has been the best roadmap they've ever had. Well, that's not news exactly, that happens every year. Every year's roadmap is better than the previous year one.
I've been at dozens of these analyst calls (not these specifically but at a large multi-national Semi). Details of architecture design comparisons are never discussed. It's well beyond the scope. It's all about the Ghz (giggle hurts) right? The language doesn't strike me, and you got it at the end, of saying anything specific. It is intentional. I wouldn't infer anything solid from them regarding future product/roadmap and that's they way they like it. I could tell you some stories about the dishonesty/misinformation that goes on.