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They all support XFR I believe.
X designates the higher boost clock and 95W TDP so they boost further with XFR.
It would seem that overclocked memory is not worth the money.Just double checking that ALL DDR4 is compatible with Ryzen, right?
Going off Gibbo's post about getting the 1700 to 4Ghz I have some reservations about pre ordering.
You can buy a 1700 for £319 + expensive X370 mobo (Gibbo states the B350's arent upto the job) for £250+ so £569+ and OC to try and get 4Ghz.
You can buy a 1800x for £488 + cheap B350 mobo for £80 so £568 and get 4Ghz.
With the 1700 you might end up with a lemon so not reach 4Ghz.
With the 1800x if it doesnt at least get 4Ghz advertised speed you send it back?
With the 1700 you end up with a more feature rich mobo if you need all the extra options but with the 1800x you could always upgrade the mobo down the line.
Without any real information its crazy to buy until benchmarks are out.
Still too long, if reviewers have their samples AMD would be smart giving the go ahead now, this is just giving Intel a chance to go full damage limitation mode, AMD would be wise not to give Intel an inch.
True. Hence I am holding until next week. I want a workstation because I need it for unity engine and rendering however not that desperate to pre-order even if I would like one.
Agree ...seems stupid not to open the flood gates ...maybe there win 10 cpu driver or something is not ready for full potential
They all support XFR!!
Gibbo states that u need a high end board because these cpu are a challenge for the vrm.
We have seen down clocking on lower end models.
They all support XFR!!
Gibbo states that u need a high end board because these cpu are a challenge for the vrm.
We have seen down clocking on lower end models.
It makes sense to see what reviews show first TBH,and one of my mates is looking at a R7 1700 for more productivity based stuff so is doing the same.
It would seem that overclocked memory is not worth the money.
Gibbo has said that the Crosshair can justabout do 3000MHz and all others are struggling to do 2666MHz. Maybe if you gimp the cpu and use less sticks you might see the supported 3200 that iirc one mobo claims.
Sounds like a total waste of time to fork out for the extra speed when (a) you can't get it and (b) the capacity is what really matters.
The AMD Ryzen 7 1700X 3,4 GHz 8-Core Processor at a Glance:
Can you update your store page and put that on the 1700 then because the moment your own store page is heavily implying that is not the case.
- 8 "Zen" cores with a low 95 Watt Thermal Design Power (TDP)
- 16 Threads thanks to Simultaneous Multithreading (SMT)
- Very high single- and multi-thread performance
- 3,4 GHz Base- & 3,8 GHz Turbo Clock with Precision Boost
- "X" Version with automatic XFR overclocking <<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<
- Unlocked multiplier for manual overclocking (unlocked CPU)
- Large memory cache: 4 MB L2 & 16 MB L3
- Highly efficient, non-planar 14 Nanometre FinFET transistors
- AVX2 instruction set extensions for complex vector calculations
- Two AES units for fast and reliable data encryption
- Modern AM4 platform with extensive features
- Supports energy efficient DDR4-RAM (Dual-Channel)
- Attention: Boxed version without CPU cooler
EDIT------------
http://www.amd.com/en-us/innovations/ryzen-pre-order
The AMD official website clearly states XFR is on the 1800x and the 1700x it doesn't mention it for the 1700.
EDIT 2---------
Update 22/02/17 17:10 GMT: Overclockers UK has confirmed Ryzen 7 pre-order pricing which we discuss HERE.
- Ryzen 7 1800X – 8 cores, 16 threads, 3.6GHz base speed, 4.0GHz boost speed, 4.1GHz maximum XFR speed, 95W TDP, $499 USD, £489.95 OCUK price.
- Ryzen 7 1700X – 8 cores, 16 threads, 3.4GHz base speed, 3.8GHz boost speed, XFR support, 95W TDP, $399 USD, £379.99 OCUK price.
- Ryzen 7 1700 – 8 cores, 16 threads, 3.0GHz base speed, 3.7GHz boost speed, no XFR support, 65W TDP, $329 USD, £319.99 OCUK price.
That ‘X’ prefix denotes support for eXtended Frequency Range (XFR) which allows a number of the CPU’s cores to operate at up to 1 multiplier bin higher if thermal and power threshold budgets are not saturated. The main difference between the 1700X and 1800X is related to operating frequency. The 1800X is essentially a cherry-picked chip that fits a more desirable voltage-frequency curve and can be expected to overclock higher than its 1700X counterpart.
Update 22/02/17 17:10 GMT: Overclockers UK has confirmed Ryzen 7 pre-order pricing which we discuss HERE.
- Ryzen 7 1800X – 8 cores, 16 threads, 3.6GHz base speed, 4.0GHz boost speed, 4.1GHz maximum XFR speed, 95W TDP, $499 USD, £489.95 OCUK price.
- Ryzen 7 1700X – 8 cores, 16 threads, 3.4GHz base speed, 3.8GHz boost speed, XFR support, 95W TDP, $399 USD, £379.99 OCUK price.
- Ryzen 7 1700 – 8 cores, 16 threads, 3.0GHz base speed, 3.7GHz boost speed, no XFR support, 65W TDP, $329 USD, £319.99 OCUK price.
That ‘X’ prefix denotes support for eXtended Frequency Range (XFR) which allows a number of the CPU’s cores to operate at up to 1 multiplier bin higher if thermal and power threshold budgets are not saturated. The main difference between the 1700X and 1800X is related to operating frequency. The 1800X is essentially a cherry-picked chip that fits a more desirable voltage-frequency curve and can be expected to overclock higher than its 1700X counterpart.
Source - https://www.kitguru.net/components/...t-ryzen-7-cpus-set-to-hit-intel-pricing-hard/
With the best respect, the official AMD website, OCUK's own pre-order pages and pretty much all news outlets are reporting the opposite of what you're saying.
Will test another 1700 but they so have XFR, it seems confusion from AMD!
The X means higher boost clock and thermal TDP to allow higher boost in the XFR mode. But they all have XFR it just more limited on 1700 due to it being 65W.
its a common trick for retailers to do the imaginary pricing to get people to their site.see the price when they in stock
then you will see how much they really cost.
also aots is a amd game.literally their benchmark tool so throw that in the bin for a start.
Basically I'm under the impression that I could buy a 1700 and turn it manually into the 1800x by removing the TDP limit and upping clocks.
I have my basket ready to click buy just need to clear a few things up
Will test another 1700 but they so have XFR, it seems confusion from AMD!
The X means higher boost clock and thermal TDP to allow higher boost in the XFR mode. But they all have XFR it just more limited on 1700 due to it being 65W.
The AMD Ryzen 7 1700X 3,4 GHz 8-Core Processor at a Glance:
Can you update your store page and put that on the 1700 then because the moment your own store page is heavily implying that is not the case.
- 8 "Zen" cores with a low 95 Watt Thermal Design Power (TDP)
- 16 Threads thanks to Simultaneous Multithreading (SMT)
- Very high single- and multi-thread performance
- 3,4 GHz Base- & 3,8 GHz Turbo Clock with Precision Boost
- "X" Version with automatic XFR overclocking <<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<
- Unlocked multiplier for manual overclocking (unlocked CPU)
- Large memory cache: 4 MB L2 & 16 MB L3
- Highly efficient, non-planar 14 Nanometre FinFET transistors
- AVX2 instruction set extensions for complex vector calculations
- Two AES units for fast and reliable data encryption
- Modern AM4 platform with extensive features
- Supports energy efficient DDR4-RAM (Dual-Channel)
- Attention: Boxed version without CPU cooler
EDIT------------
http://www.amd.com/en-us/innovations/ryzen-pre-order
The AMD official website clearly states XFR is on the 1800x and the 1700x it doesn't mention it for the 1700.
EDIT 2---------
Update 22/02/17 17:10 GMT: Overclockers UK has confirmed Ryzen 7 pre-order pricing which we discuss HERE.
- Ryzen 7 1800X – 8 cores, 16 threads, 3.6GHz base speed, 4.0GHz boost speed, 4.1GHz maximum XFR speed, 95W TDP, $499 USD, £489.95 OCUK price.
- Ryzen 7 1700X – 8 cores, 16 threads, 3.4GHz base speed, 3.8GHz boost speed, XFR support, 95W TDP, $399 USD, £379.99 OCUK price.
- Ryzen 7 1700 – 8 cores, 16 threads, 3.0GHz base speed, 3.7GHz boost speed, no XFR support, 65W TDP, $329 USD, £319.99 OCUK price.
That ‘X’ prefix denotes support for eXtended Frequency Range (XFR) which allows a number of the CPU’s cores to operate at up to 1 multiplier bin higher if thermal and power threshold budgets are not saturated. The main difference between the 1700X and 1800X is related to operating frequency. The 1800X is essentially a cherry-picked chip that fits a more desirable voltage-frequency curve and can be expected to overclock higher than its 1700X counterpart.
Source - https://www.kitguru.net/components/...t-ryzen-7-cpus-set-to-hit-intel-pricing-hard/
With the best respect, the official AMD website, OCUK's own pre-order pages and pretty much all news outlets are reporting the opposite of what you're saying.