Poor | Average | Good | Excellent | |
---|---|---|---|---|
Processor lithography | 14 nm Best: HP AMD EPYC 7702 Processor lithography: 7 nm | |||
Number of cores | 8 Best: Intel Xeon Phi Coprocessor 7290 Number of cores: 72 | |||
Clock speed | 3 GHz Best: AMD FX 9590 Clock speed: 4.7 GHz | |||
Max turbo speed | 3.7 GHz Best: Cisco Intel Xeon E5-2609 Max turbo speed: 24 GHz |
Processor socket | AM4 |
---|---|
Component for | PC |
Operating modes |
|
On-board graphics adapter | no |
---|
Thermal specification | 203.0 °F |
---|
Clock speed | 3.0 GHz |
---|---|
Max turbo speed | 3.7 GHz |
Number of cores | 8 |
Number of threads | 16 |
Thermal Design Power (TDP) | 65.0 W |
Processor lithography | 0.0 in |
Cache | 16 MB |
---|---|
Cache type | L3 |
Memory clock speeds supported by processor | 2667.0 MHz |
Memory types supported by processor | DDR4 SDRAM |
Memory channels | Dual |
Supported instruction sets |
|
---|
Ryzen 7 has already proven to be a worthy contender for Intel's LGA 2011-3 set of processors thanks
The slow comparatively cheap Ryzen 7 17000 has slower stock frequencies than the Ryzen 7 1700X and 1800X, and the lack of an ‘X’ in its name signifies that
AMD's entry-level Ryzen 7 chip impresses on multi-core tasks, and our test chip overclocked to nearly 4GHz. But Intel's "Kaby Lake" chips are better at lightly threaded workloads and 1080p gaming—at least for now.
We test the most affordable Ryzen 7 series processor, the 1700 CPU will cost you only 329 USD. This units oozes value as the performance is really good. The 8-core processor will be tested on an X370 ... Introduction
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