Poor | Average | Good | Excellent | |
---|---|---|---|---|
Processor lithography | 12 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 | 3.6 GHz Best: AMD FX 9590 Clock speed: 4.7 GHz | |||
Max turbo speed | 4.1 GHz Best: Cisco Intel Xeon E5-2609 Max turbo speed: 24 GHz |
Processor socket | AM4 |
---|---|
Component for | PC |
Operating modes | 64-bit |
On-board graphics adapter | no |
---|---|
Type | Not available |
Thermal specification | 185.0 °F |
---|
Clock speed | 3.6 GHz |
---|---|
Max turbo speed | 4.1 GHz |
Number of cores | 8 |
Number of threads | 16 |
Thermal Design Power (TDP) | 105.0 W |
Processor lithography | 0.0 in |
Cache | 16 MB |
---|---|
Cache type | L3 |
Memory clock speeds supported by processor | 2933.0 MHz |
Memory types supported by processor | DDR4 SDRAM |
Memory channels | Dual |
AMD claims the Ryzen 7 2700X brings up to a 20% productivity boost, and is near-equivalent in gaming to Intel's Coffee Lake chips. Does it live up to the hype?
AMD's Ryzen 7 2700X costs half the price of the competition, yet still manages to offer top-notch performance for 4K gaming
AMD's eight-core Ryzen 7 2700X shines for workstation apps and multitasking, and gamers who pair it with a high-end video card should get better 1080p gaming than with first-gen Ryzen. That's a winning combo.
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We review the new 12nm Zen+ AMD Ryzen update, the Ryzen 7 2700X processor is on da house and gets reviewed today. What will they bring in terms of performance, paired as well with the new X470 series ... Introduction
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