The AchieVer Posted January 4, 2019 Share Posted January 4, 2019 16-core Ryzen 9 planned alongside Ryzen 7 with boost clock of 5GHz The leak comes ahead of an anticipated unveiling by CEO Lisa Su at CES 2019 next week A Russian retailer appears to have leaked details of AMD's forthcoming Zen 2-based Ryzen CPUs. The leak comes just days ahead of their anticipated unveiling by CEO Lisa Su at the CES 2019 trade show in Las Vegas, Nevada next week. The leak includes the raw details for a Ryzen 9 3800X CPU that will offer 16 cores, 32 threads and a boost clock speed of 4.7GHz. The Zen 2 architecture has been code-named Matisse by AMD and will be built on TSMC's 7nm process architecture, leap-frogging Intel as it struggles to finesse manufacturing at 10nm. And the retailer, called E-Katalog, appears to have published the raw details of all the forthcoming Ryzen CPUs, from the Ryzen 3 all the way up to the aforementioned Ryzen 9. Model Cores Threads Base clock Boost clock TDP Ryzen 9 3800X 16 32 3.9GHz 4.7GHz 125W Ryzen 7 3700X 12 24 4.2GHz 5.0GHz 105W Ryzen 7 3700 12 24 3.8GHz 4.6GHz 95W Ryzen 5 3600X 8 16 4.0GHz 4.8GHz 95W Ryzen 5 3600 8 16 3.6GHz 4.4GHz 65W Ryzen 3 3300X 6 12 3.5GHz 4.3GHz 65W Ryzen 3 3300 6 12 3.2GHz 4.0GHz 50W The Ryzen 7 3700X looks a particularly interesting part: it will be the first AMD Ryzen CPU hitting the 5GHz clock speed out of the box, albeit in boost mode. This mirrors Intel's efforts to offer some highly clocked CPUs in a bid to stay ahead of newly invigorated AMD. Even the entry-level Ryzen 3 CPUs will get a core and thread-count boost. The Ryzen 3 3300 will get six cores and 12 threads, while running at a base speed of 3.2GHz. Meanwhile, its slightly more expensive Ryzen 3 stablemate, the 3300X, will offer 3.5GHz out of the box for the same number of cores and threads. The leak has since been cleaned up, but not before the specialist Videocardzwebsite got the screen grabs. AMD CEO Lisa Su will be giving a keynote at the CES 2019 tradeshow in Las Vegas, Nevada next week where she is expected to provide more details on these forthcomign microprocessors. Source Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
The leak comes ahead of an anticipated unveiling by CEO Lisa Su at CES 2019 next week A Russian retailer appears to have leaked details of AMD's forthcoming Zen 2-based Ryzen CPUs. The leak comes just days ahead of their anticipated unveiling by CEO Lisa Su at the CES 2019 trade show in Las Vegas, Nevada next week. The leak includes the raw details for a Ryzen 9 3800X CPU that will offer 16 cores, 32 threads and a boost clock speed of 4.7GHz. The Zen 2 architecture has been code-named Matisse by AMD and will be built on TSMC's 7nm process architecture, leap-frogging Intel as it struggles to finesse manufacturing at 10nm. And the retailer, called E-Katalog, appears to have published the raw details of all the forthcoming Ryzen CPUs, from the Ryzen 3 all the way up to the aforementioned Ryzen 9. Model Cores Threads Base clock Boost clock TDP Ryzen 9 3800X 16 32 3.9GHz 4.7GHz 125W Ryzen 7 3700X 12 24 4.2GHz 5.0GHz 105W Ryzen 7 3700 12 24 3.8GHz 4.6GHz 95W Ryzen 5 3600X 8 16 4.0GHz 4.8GHz 95W Ryzen 5 3600 8 16 3.6GHz 4.4GHz 65W Ryzen 3 3300X 6 12 3.5GHz 4.3GHz 65W Ryzen 3 3300 6 12 3.2GHz 4.0GHz 50W The Ryzen 7 3700X looks a particularly interesting part: it will be the first AMD Ryzen CPU hitting the 5GHz clock speed out of the box, albeit in boost mode. This mirrors Intel's efforts to offer some highly clocked CPUs in a bid to stay ahead of newly invigorated AMD. Even the entry-level Ryzen 3 CPUs will get a core and thread-count boost. The Ryzen 3 3300 will get six cores and 12 threads, while running at a base speed of 3.2GHz. Meanwhile, its slightly more expensive Ryzen 3 stablemate, the 3300X, will offer 3.5GHz out of the box for the same number of cores and threads. The leak has since been cleaned up, but not before the specialist Videocardzwebsite got the screen grabs. AMD CEO Lisa Su will be giving a keynote at the CES 2019 tradeshow in Las Vegas, Nevada next week where she is expected to provide more details on these forthcomign microprocessors. Source
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