But CAT, we've discussed this before, the chiplet approach means binning and allocation is not that black-and-white any more. AMD aren't going to waste a 5GHz-capable chip on EPYC.
All of the supremely power efficient 6 and 8 core chiplets will go to EPYC.
All of the supremely fast chiplets will go to the top Ryzen SKUs.
Threadripper could get the fastest chiplets (2950X is the fastest Ryzen 2000 product for example) but could equally get comparative cruft and still be a monster; a 6 core chiplet only capable of 4.5GHz is pretty poor on its own, but 8 of those gives you a 48 core, all-core 4.5GHz monster.
And again, there is more money to be made on high volume, low margin sales. Yes, a HEDT part may carry 5 times the markup of a desktop part, but if the desktop parts outsell HEDT by 10 times then desktop makes more money. It would be utterly ridiculous for AMD to gimp their desktop products because of the promise of higher margins on HEDT and enterprise.
Chiplet size is only 70-78 sq.mm.
Zen 1 size is 213 sq.mm.
From the same quantity of wafer starts, TSMC will produce more 7nm chiplets with 70% yields than 14nm 213 sq.mm chips with allegedly higher yields.
But again why would AMD prioritise 8C chiplets
at launch when you have limited volume for low margin consumer desktop over say server/supercomputer or HEDT?? TSMC 7NM is much less mature than GF 14NM was when Ryzen was made. It costs less per wafer too.AMD also has to contend with other companies using a new node,so there is how much capacity they have too. Remember,Navi is also on 7NM too.
The server chips tend to run at under 3GHZ and sell for a lot more money than consumer chips. The consumer chips will need to run at 4GHZ~5GHZ to make any sense for people on here. So you are asking for perfect silicon for pocket money. Even if you have 70% yields,how many of those will do the high clockspeeds people expect??
What if AMD at launch pushes a run of special edition 16C Ryzen 2 chips but at well over £500?? Athlon 64 FX anyone??
I fear some of you are expecting way too much of the hype train and you are going to be disappointed if one of the things don't work out.
Edit!!
Also what is this magic Intel CPU AMD needs to compete with in June??
Another 14NM CPU with an extra 2 cores plonked on?? How is that going to work with the extra power consumption and cooling required??
If its 7NM/10NM then its a large monolithic core against salvaged chiplets??
When is that going to appear?? End of the year or early next year?? By then 7NM will be yielding even better and be cheaper to boot.
I mean I am not saying AMD won't launch mass production AM4 16C Ryzen 2 CPUs in June,but then again I don't see why they NEED to,and why launching 12C now makes no sense.
It makes more sense financially to have a 12C SKU which can match what Intel has now in single threaded performance with 12C, than a 16C SKU which has problems clocking high due to needing good silicon quality or a lack of cooling due to the early nature of the node.
I would be more concerned if AMD needed to compete with the 8C Core i9 9900K or the next 14NM refresh with 16C,when Comet Lake S has apparently only 10C,and will amplify the problems we saw with the 8C CPUs when pushed.