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Guru3D.com » News » AMD Readies Ryzen 5 Series and will offer six- and four-core processors starting April 11

AMD Readies Ryzen 5 Series and will offer six- and four-core processors starting April 11

by Hilbert Hagedoorn on: 03/16/2017 05:22 AM | source: | 81 comment(s)
AMD Readies Ryzen 5 Series and will offer six- and four-core processors starting April 11

AMD today is announcing more Ryzen processors. As you guys know AMD made a promise to release the Ryzen 5 series in Q2 this year. Well, they have been able to meet that time slot and as such we can shed some light on Ryzen 5 processors that are to be released April 11th.

First off I wanted to write a quick apology to the AMD team, a handful of you might have noticed this news-item yesterday morning already. Ye ol' Hilbert here converted the embargo time wrong, which was initially set at March 15th 11pm CT. Once you convert CT to CET that reads 5am CET (central european standard time). However, that would be on the next day, and not the current day for Europe. So all info that you all have been able to read widely on the web yesterday is a result of a time conversion error from our side. In the minutes the news-item was only all content including full screenshots got posted and plastered onto the web everywhere. That is so how we not roll. That said, it's 4 and 6-core Ryzen time you guys. Ryzen 5 will be a handful of 6-core processors as well as 4-core processors, priced attractively I must say. Both the 6 and 4 core models all are SMT thus you may double up the cores into threads 4:8 and 6:12.

AMD will release four new models:

  • Ryzen 5 1600X
    This is a six-core part with 12-threads. The base frequency will be 3.6 GHz with a nice 4.0 Ghz boost frequency. This processor will cost 249 USD.
  • Ryzen 5 1600
    This is a six-core part with 12-threads. The base frequency will be 3.2 GHz with a nice 3.6 GHz boost  aka turbo frequency. This processor will cost 219 USD.
  • Ryzen 5 1500X
    This is a four-core part with 8-threads. The base frequency will be 3.5 GHz with a 3.7 GHz boost  aka turbo frequency. This processor will cost 189 USD.
  • Ryzen 5 1400
    The 1400 is again a four-core part with 8-threads. The base frequency will be 3.2 GHz with a 3.4 GHz boost aka turbo frequency. This processor will cost 169 USD.

As stated before these processors are priced competitive alright. The flagship units will have a 95 Watt TDP, the lower SKUs settle for 65 Watts. These value are indicative that the processors are all 8-core models with a CCX or two cores disabled, this is yet to be confirmed though.

Update: The six-core parts will configured into a strict 3+3 combination, while the four-core parts will use 2+2. This confirms that both core clusters are in use and indeed these are 8-core parts with cores disabled. That also means for the 4-core enabled parts, the CCX clusters will run into the very same CPU bound game performance challenges. Then again with less cores enabled there's also less load and thus there should be less latency in-between the two CCXes.

AMD is going to make SKUs available with a stock coolers, these will be the Wraith Stealth for the Ryzen 5 1400 and the Wraith Spire for the 1600 and 1600X. These stock coolers do not have LED lighting enabled.

Improved XFR ranges - Ryzen 5 1500X also has support for an extended XFR frequency range of up to 3.9GHz (+200MHz over the max, all-core turbo frequency), XFR details for the other processors in the line-up have not been detailed. The four Ryzen 5 processors will be available starting April 11th. Ryzen series 3 you will see in the 2nd Half of 2017. 

  

 

Processor model

Cores/Threads

L3 Cache

TDP

Base

Turbo

Unlocked

Price

AMD Ryzen 7 1800X

8/16

16 MB

95 W

3.6 GHz

4.0 GHz

Yes

$499

AMD Ryzen 7 1700X

8/16

16 MB

95 W

3.4 GHz

3.8 GHz

Yes

$399

AMD Ryzen 7 1700

8/16

16 MB

65 W

3.0 GHz

3.7 GHz

Yes

$349

AMD Ryzen 5 1600X

6/12

16 MB

95 W

3.6 GHz

4.0 GHz

Yes

$249

AMD Ryzen 5 1600

6/12

16 MB

95 W

3.2 GHz

3.6 GHz

Yes

$219

AMD Ryzen 5 1500X

4/8

TBA

65 W

3.5 GHz

3.7 GHz

Yes

$189

AMD Ryzen 5 1400

4/8

TBA

65 W

3.2 GHz

3.4 GHz

Yes

$169

 
In the above table you can see the launch SKUs as well as an overview of what to expect in the coming months processor wise, it is going to be a busy year with AMD processor reviews alright. Have a browse below at the media deck for some more details.



AMD Readies Ryzen 5 Series and will offer six- and four-core processors starting April 11 AMD Readies Ryzen 5 Series and will offer six- and four-core processors starting April 11 AMD Readies Ryzen 5 Series and will offer six- and four-core processors starting April 11 AMD Readies Ryzen 5 Series and will offer six- and four-core processors starting April 11 AMD Readies Ryzen 5 Series and will offer six- and four-core processors starting April 11 AMD Readies Ryzen 5 Series and will offer six- and four-core processors starting April 11 AMD Readies Ryzen 5 Series and will offer six- and four-core processors starting April 11 AMD Readies Ryzen 5 Series and will offer six- and four-core processors starting April 11 AMD Readies Ryzen 5 Series and will offer six- and four-core processors starting April 11 AMD Readies Ryzen 5 Series and will offer six- and four-core processors starting April 11 AMD Readies Ryzen 5 Series and will offer six- and four-core processors starting April 11




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sverek



Posts: 6070
Joined: 2011-01-02

#5407553 Posted on: 03/16/2017 05:35 AM
dejavu ;)

Looking forward for 6 cores performance.

sykozis



Posts: 22421
Joined: 2008-07-14

#5407556 Posted on: 03/16/2017 05:47 AM
So when dealing with a four-core or six-core CPU, and the base core design has eight-cores, how does AMD cut them up? It is possible for AMD to offer a 4+0, 3+1 or 2+2 design for its quad-core parts, or 4+2 and 3+3 variants for its hexacore parts, similar to the way that Intel cuts up its integrated graphics for GT1 variants. The downside with this way is that performance might differ between the variants, making it difficult to manage. The upside is that more CPUs with defects can be used.

We have confirmation from AMD that there are no silly games going to be played with Ryzen 5. The six-core parts will be a strict 3+3 combination, while the four-core parts will use 2+2. This will be true across all CPUs, ensuring a consistent performance throughout.


source: http://www.anandtech.com/show/11202/amd-announces-ryzen-5-april-11th

Neo Cyrus
Senior Member



Posts: 10482
Joined: 2006-02-14

#5407562 Posted on: 03/16/2017 06:16 AM
source: http://www.anandtech.com/show/11202/amd-announces-ryzen-5-april-11th

Yeah, I was wondering about that. Thanks. Though it's kind of disappointing they won't be offering non-defective dies for "4 core" chips, just a straight up working set of 4. I guess they have a lot of defective dies.

GSDragoon
Senior Member



Posts: 396
Joined: 2006-11-29

#5407563 Posted on: 03/16/2017 06:19 AM
Interesting, CCX for all of them then.

sykozis
Senior Member



Posts: 22421
Joined: 2008-07-14

#5407566 Posted on: 03/16/2017 06:27 AM
Yeah, I was wondering about that. Thanks. Though it's kind of disappointing they won't be offering non-defective dies for "4 core" chips, just a straight up working set of 4. I guess they have a lot of defective dies.


Yeah.... I was disappointed to read that. I was hoping that the 4c/8t chips would have a single CCX. I'm pretty much expecting a similar trend for that 4c/8t and 6c/12t chips as we see with the Ryzen 7 chips where anything latency sensitive sees a hefty performance hit due to the "AMD Infinity Fabric" being crap.

Interesting, CCX for all of them then.


CCX would be a part of all of them anyway. Ryzen 7 processors contain 2 fully functional CCX units. Ryzen 5 will have 2 partially disabled CCX units. Even if they weren't being split 3+3 or 2+2, there would still be at least 1 CCX unit on the quad-core processors and 2 on the hexa-core processors. Each CCX unit contains 4 CPU cores.... No CCX unit, no cores.

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