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AMD Zen 2 (Ryzen 3000) - *** NO COMPETITOR HINTING ***

Soldato
Joined
22 Nov 2002
Posts
2,738
Location
South UK
Shame no 16 core on release. I may wait a while and see how it pans out.

Is there no info on Threadripper 2?
Looks like they are sitting on the 16C part for now, which is a bit of a shame, but they must feel confident that they have, for now, got Intel covered. It's nice to see that AMD are confident enough to play it this way and not show their hand all at once, I don't think they will have a 5GZ part, extrapolating from their known CPU's I guess it'll be something like 16Core/32T @ 4-4.2Base/4.7-4.8Boost @125-140W($600-$650) - it'll still be a beast.

They did say they haven't abandoned TR4, but no concrete details as of yet.
 
Associate
Joined
11 Jul 2007
Posts
567
Shame no 16 core on release. I may wait a while and see how it pans out.

Is there no info on Threadripper 2?

The guy from Techyescity (YouTube) is at Computex and he posted pics of the motherboard guys benchmarking ES of the 16c running @ 4.1ghz. So I'm guessing AMD haven't got them quite where they want them yet, or are holding them back to pre-empt an Intel 12-core release.
 

GAC

GAC

Soldato
Joined
11 Dec 2004
Posts
4,688
i bet we see 16 core ryzen come june the 10th at amd's E3 event where more info was promised.

does make me chuckle at a few on here moaning about the prices and how amd are making a mess when the chips havent even launched yet or been benched in the real world. amd have what looks like a genuinely faster chip than intel for the first time in ages yet its not enough?! fanboys really need to take their heads out of their backsides over this and calm down before they give themselves a stroke.
 
Permabanned
Joined
2 Sep 2017
Posts
10,490
Who on earth thought that? Ryzen 3 is low budget. Ryzen 5 is low cost, high value. 7 is premium. 9 is now high end. How could that work with Ryzen 5 being 8 core? Also, why would they do it? They'd hit their margins, and it's completely unnecessary as Intel have nothing to respond with until H2 2020, by which time Zen 3 will be out.

IMO, AMD would be best off not launching the 16 core at all, and saving all the better dies for EPYC and TR4. Intel don't have a reply to the 12 core, let alone the 16 core. Move AM4 to 16 core top end on Zen 3, when hopefully power reductions on EUV will make it a more friendly product for the enthusiast socket (as opposed to HEDT TR4).

Because of the missing Ryzen 3 3000, we need to have the Ryzen 5 2600 as the new low budget.
intel has an i9-9920X that is in performance virtually equal to the 3900X. They can remove the price tag and will have the competition right there.

Also, AMD position the 3800X against the 8C/8T 9700K :eek: :confused:
 
Associate
Joined
24 Nov 2010
Posts
2,314
Looks like they are sitting on the 16C part for now, which is a bit of a shame, but they must feel confident that they have, for now, got Intel covered. It's nice to see that AMD are confident enough to play it this way and not show their hand all at once, I don't think they will have a 5GZ part, extrapolating from their known CPU's I guess it'll be something like 16Core/32T @ 4-4.2Base/4.7-4.8Boost @125-140W($600-$650) - it'll still be a beast.

They did say they haven't abandoned TR4, but no concrete details as of yet.

14nmFF++++++++ is already a volcano at 8 cores, on such a small package, and they need to hit massive clocks to be competitive with Zen 2.

10nm by Intel's own admission has now had EUV canned completely, clocks are much lower than the bigger node, and yields are a disaster (rumoured to be no better than 30%). Hence why we've only seen a trickle of mobile products on it so far. They claim they're going to do their first GPU, and low power sever / workstation chips on it next year, but we'll see about that ...

So basically, any major improvement has to be in 2021, Intel hopes, on their 7nm EUV .. and that's still scheduled to be Core architecture.

Why launch the 16 core part at all on AM4? Do it with Zen 3 and 7nm EUV or 6nm EUV. It's total overkill for gaming, and general productivity, and for other purposes, that many fast cores are likely going to be a bit starved on dual channel. Keep it for TR4.
 
Associate
Joined
24 Nov 2010
Posts
2,314
Because of the missing Ryzen 3 3000, we need to have the Ryzen 5 2600 as the new low budget.
intel has an i9-9920X that is in performance virtually equal to the 3900X. They can remove the price tag and will have the competition right there.

Also, AMD position the 3800X against the 8C/8T 9700K :eek: :confused:

Ryzen 3 3xxx isn't missing. It just wasn't launched today. They said it was coming. This isn't the full stack.

You actually believe Intel can compete with AMD on price at anything above 4 cores? No way. The 9920X can't be priced anywhere near the 3900X, because yields are absolutely miserable. If you're expecting major price reductions on Intel's products above 4 cores, you'll be disappointed.

There'll be enough fanbois and brand loyalists to keep their business ticking over. Shattering their margins to try to compete would be worse for the business, and shares would sink without trace. They've got to rely on brand recognition and loyalty for 2-3 years now.
 
Caporegime
Joined
17 Mar 2012
Posts
47,382
Location
ARC-L1, Stanton System
price of the 3900x doesn't look bad compared to what the threadripper 12 core parts where at launch.

3900x $499 3.8-4.6
2920x $649 3.5-4.3
1920x $799 3.5-4.0


I paid £265 for my 1700 7 months after launch (£329)

Yeah, i paid £160 for my 1600, it had already been out for a little while and was discounted from £180.

I'm running it at 3.85Ghz 24/7, 3600 @ 4.1Ghz = +7%, +15% IPC = +22% + Shiny = Happy humbug = Good = £200 is worth it, + get £70 back on the 1600? £40 on the board?
 
Associate
Joined
31 Jan 2012
Posts
1,948
Location
Droitwich, UK
your on a old i5 anything is going to be a upgrade over what you have. £100 on ram £100 mobo 2700 at £160. big upgrade for not much.

Absolutely. The uplift at 1440p from a 4690K to 8700K was huge, even with a 980 Ti (YMMV depending on the games you play). Any Ryzen+ 6 core or Intel equivalent will show a good increase in many games.
 
Soldato
Joined
18 Oct 2012
Posts
4,139
Location
Oxfordshire
Some serious cash going to be spent if people go for a decent motherboard and CPU. I was thinking £250 for a motherboard and £350 for a CPU would get me a couple of rungs down from the high end. Looks like I need to rethink, the £700 budget could easily climb to £900. Threadripper doesn't look so expensive any more :p

It does get you a couple rungs down with the 3700x at £330 and leaving £370 for mobo. That CPU is around the i9 9900k by a few%
 

233

233

Soldato
Joined
21 Nov 2004
Posts
13,500
Location
Wishaw
absolutely stoked at how good this is shaping up,

although sitting on a 2600k and dual 280xs this is going to have to be a full on rebuild this is going to be a painful year :(
 
Soldato
Joined
22 Nov 2018
Posts
2,710
Yeah, i paid £160 for my 1600, it had already been out for a little while and was discounted from £180.

I'm running it at 3.85Ghz 24/7, 3600 @ 4.1Ghz = +7%, +15% IPC = +22% + Shiny = Happy humbug = Good = £200 is worth it, + get £70 back on the 1600? £40 on the board?

+ 100% more cache + 100% faster floating point + higher multi-threaded performance + lower latency.

I'm really looking forward to gaming benchmarks 3600 vs 2700.
 
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