Poor | Average | Good | Excellent | |
---|---|---|---|---|
Number of cores | 16 Best: Intel Xeon Phi Coprocessor 7290 Number of cores: 72 | |||
Clock speed | 2.4 GHz Best: AMD FX 9590 Clock speed: 4.7 GHz | |||
Max turbo speed | 2.9 GHz Best: Cisco Intel Xeon E5-2609 Max turbo speed: 24 GHz |
Processor socket | Socket SP3 |
---|---|
Component for | Server/Workstation |
Operating modes | 64-bit |
On-board graphics adapter | no |
---|
Clock speed | 2.4 GHz |
---|---|
Max turbo speed | 2.9 GHz |
Number of cores | 16 |
Number of threads | 32 |
Thermal Design Power (TDP) | 170.0 W |
Cache | 64 MB |
---|---|
Cache type | L3 |
Memory clock speeds supported by processor |
|
Memory channels | Octa |
Our AMD EPYC 7351P linux benchmarks and review includes a comparison to other AMD EPYC CPUs under $1000 and the entire Intel Xeon Silver line
Introduction AMD EPYC 7351P 16-Core/32-Thread SP3 Processor GIGABYTE send us some AMD EPYC processors (link) so we can test the matching motherboards, so it's only suitable to offer you full reviews of the processors themselves. Today we're taking a closer look at the second of two, the AMD EPYC 7351P. The EPYC 7351P is designed for single-socket motherboards and it offers us half the cores and threads of the 7551P. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=pq7yyVX5C_I AMD EPYC 7351P Server Processor in Numbers The EPYC specifications aren't a secret, so let us start with those. As mentioned above, you get 16 CPU cores and 32
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