Both clock speeds and power consumption are up, as we knew they would be, with the highest turbo clock going to the R9 7950X at 5.7GHz and the four announced SKUs ranging from 105W to 170W TDP. One assumes that 65W non-X components with lower clocks will follow at some point. In terms of performance, we’re waiting for independent testing, but AMD seems confident in its IPC increases, which are reportedly about 13% higher compared to Zen 3, with an overall increase per core (including higher clocks and the move to faster DDR5 memory) which brings this up to a “29% overall single-thread performance gain”.
title: “Amd Announces Ryzen 7000 Specs And Pricing Klmat” ShowToc: true date: “2022-12-07” author: “Mary Pena”
Both clock speeds and power consumption are up, as we knew they would be, with the highest turbo clock going to the R9 7950X at 5.7GHz and the four announced SKUs ranging from 105W to 170W TDP. One assumes that 65W non-X components with lower clocks will follow at some point. In terms of performance, we’re waiting for independent testing, but AMD seems confident in its IPC increases, which are reportedly about 13% higher compared to Zen 3, with an overall increase per core (including higher clocks and the move to faster DDR5 memory) which brings this up to a “29% overall single-thread performance gain”.
title: “Amd Announces Ryzen 7000 Specs And Pricing Klmat” ShowToc: true date: “2022-12-04” author: “James Ruley”
Both clock speeds and power consumption are up, as we knew they would be, with the highest turbo clock going to the R9 7950X at 5.7GHz and the four announced SKUs ranging from 105W to 170W TDP. One assumes that 65W non-X components with lower clocks will follow at some point. In terms of performance, we’re waiting for independent testing, but AMD seems confident in its IPC increases, which are reportedly about 13% higher compared to Zen 3, with an overall increase per core (including higher clocks and the move to faster DDR5 memory) which brings this up to a “29% overall single-thread performance gain”.
title: “Amd Announces Ryzen 7000 Specs And Pricing Klmat” ShowToc: true date: “2022-10-25” author: “Amy Butts”
Both clock speeds and power consumption are up, as we knew they would be, with the highest turbo clock going to the R9 7950X at 5.7GHz and the four announced SKUs ranging from 105W to 170W TDP. One assumes that 65W non-X components with lower clocks will follow at some point. In terms of performance, we’re waiting for independent testing, but AMD seems confident in its IPC increases, which are reportedly about 13% higher compared to Zen 3, with an overall increase per core (including higher clocks and the move to faster DDR5 memory) which brings this up to a “29% overall single-thread performance gain”.
title: “Amd Announces Ryzen 7000 Specs And Pricing Klmat” ShowToc: true date: “2022-10-22” author: “Jessica Carpentieri”
Both clock speeds and power consumption are up, as we knew they would be, with the highest turbo clock going to the R9 7950X at 5.7GHz and the four announced SKUs ranging from 105W to 170W TDP. One assumes that 65W non-X components with lower clocks will follow at some point. In terms of performance, we’re waiting for independent testing, but AMD seems confident in its IPC increases, which are reportedly about 13% higher compared to Zen 3, with an overall increase per core (including higher clocks and the move to faster DDR5 memory) which brings this up to a “29% overall single-thread performance gain”.