AMD officially announce the "Zen 2" Ryzen 3 series & new RDNA GPU architecture + Intel tease new CPU
For those looking at their next upgrade, both AMD and Intel have made announcements recently and there's a lot of big stuff coming.
On the AMD side, they've officially announce the starting line-up of the Zen 2 core units that make up the Ryzen 3 series processors. To go along with this will be the new X570 chipset for the AM4 socket which supports PCIe 4.0. Here's the specs they've given out:
- Ryzen™ 9 3900X - 12 cores/24 threads, 105W TDP, 3.8ghz base/4.6ghz boost, price around $499
- Ryzen™ 7 3800X - 8 cores/16 threads, 105W TDP, 3.9ghz base/4.5ghz boost, price around $399
- Ryzen™ 7 3700X - 8 cores/16 threads, 65W TDP, 3.6ghz base/4.4ghz boost, price around $329
- Ryzen™ 5 3600X - 6 cores/12 threads, 95W TDP, 3.8ghz base/4.4ghz boost, price around $249
- Ryzen™ 5 3600 - 6 cores/12 threads, 65W TDP, 3.6ghz base/4.2ghz boost, price around $199
All of which are expected to release on July 7th, so we're seeing 7nm on 7/7 which is mildly amusing.
They've also announced their new 7nm GPU architecture "RDNA" to replace GCN, with a claim of up to "1.25x" better performance-per-clock and "1.5x" higher performance-per-watt over GCN. RDNA is what will be powering their new AMD Radeon RX 5700-series graphics cards and they've said these new graphics cards will also be available in July.
You can find the full AMD summary here.
On the Intel front, they also had something to tease recently although nothing as major yet since they haven't done their keynote (which is tomorrow). Intel teased the 9th Gen Intel Core i9-9900KS, a "special edition" processor with 8 cores all running at 5.0 GHz while in turbo with a base of 4GHz. They said it will be shipping this year too.
You can see Intel's summary here.
Competition is good for us -- the consumer, and after being on a 32 thread CPU for half a year now I can say it does have some amazing perks.
Last edited by Arehandoro on 27 May 2019 at 10:47 am UTC
Now the only question is, when will Navi be supported mainline - hopefully not too long after launch...
I own a X370 Asus C6 Hero with 1800x and want to see if I will be better off buying the 12 core for my X370 or get an X570 board and get the 16 core chip when announced.
With all the issues that affected me when 1st gen ryzen first launched, I would rather wait and get it things right this time by waiting a few months for reviews and any potential hardware bugs to be fixed. I am also waiting to see if X570 has any benefits over X370.
I am really excited though and will be looking at the 12 core upwards.
Last edited by Shmerl on 27 May 2019 at 4:08 pm UTC
Quoting: finaldestam also waiting to see if X570 has any benefits over X370.
I'm in same situation here, and it looks like one of the possible benefits is support for PCIe 4. Since Navi will use it, it's likely we'll need new motherboards to run it a full performance.
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