The Two Main Chipsets: B350 and A320

Despite all the crazy potential that might come from playing with PCIe, if a user wants more than a couple of SATA ports or x1 slots, the chipset is there to provide. For the Bristol Ridge OEM launch, there are two main chipsets with a further three aimed more at embedded platforms. We’ll focus more on the first two.

It’s worth noting that AMD has specifically listed that the B350 chipset is not the premium chipset for AM4. We know that Zen will be a part of the AM4 socket and ecosystem, and it would seem that there is at least one specific chipset for the high-end desktop market set to come later. Feel free to speculate.

The B350 and A320 chipsets are mostly identical, using the PCIe 3.0 x4 from the CPU and offering a variety of SATA, USB and PCIe 2.0 connectivity. The PCIe 2.0 lanes, six on the B350 chipset and four on the A320 chipset, support x1, x2 and x4 modes for an array of different controllers. Perhaps the interesting thing here is the support of USB 3.1 at 10 Gbps, which is provided as native support from the chipset.

The main provider of USB 3.1 controllers in the market currently, ASMedia, has been floated around as a partner with AMD in designing these chipsets. We asked AMD if ASMedia was involved, and to what extent, in the development or IP of the hardware. We were told that while the IP is with AMD, ASMedia were bought on as a partner in some fashion (most likely as a design firm or a consultant) to help produce the hardware. We were informed that the chipsets are manufactured at TSMC using a 55nm process, which is a much cheaper process than 28nm or 16nm.

An additional aside, the chipset USB 3.1 ports do not support reversible Type-C natively. We have been informed that a re-driver chip is required to support the revisable connectivity, which is a minor additional IC required by the OEMs.

Aside from the native USB 3.1 output, AMD’s chipset offerings are far behind Intel’s current implementation, affording up to 20 PCIe 3.0 lanes from their chipset despite the same uplink equivalent. This is partly because Intel’s chipset has steadily grown and looks more like a PCIe switch itself. AMD is claiming that the external B350 chipset, compared to the older AM3 platforms, comes down from 19.6W TDP to 5.8W TDP.

Understanding Connectivity: Some on the APU, Chipset Optional Motherboards, Sockets, Pins and Things
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  • nathanddrews - Friday, September 23, 2016 - link

    "Luckily we are told that all AM4 systems should be dual channel"

    Hopefully OEMs actually use two sticks of RAM.

    Sad to see that the rumors of HEVC 10-bit acceleration were false. I was kinda hoping this would be an upgrade path for Zen, but I guess I'll skip it.
  • barn25 - Friday, September 23, 2016 - link

    Nothing can fully accelerate 10-bit HEVC on desktop. Not even nvidia.
  • zmeul - Friday, September 23, 2016 - link

    isn't KabyLake going to?
  • hahmed330 - Friday, September 23, 2016 - link

    Nope wrong all the 10 series nvidia graphics cards accelerate both the encoding and decoding at 4K60p of 10-bit HEVC. "Pascal can now encode Main10 Profile (10bit) video, and total encode throughput is rated by NVIDIA for 2 4Kp60 streams at once". Look up in the anandtech gtx 1080 review.
  • patrickjp93 - Tuesday, September 27, 2016 - link

    Encoding only on Quadros. Kaby Lake will do it with any processor that has its iGPU.
  • nathanddrews - Friday, September 23, 2016 - link

    HEVC Main 10:
    Intel Kaby Lake can
    AMD Polaris can
    NVIDIA Pascal can
    NVIDIA Maxwell (GM206) can
  • tuxRoller - Friday, September 23, 2016 - link

    Personally, I've been crossing my fingers for hevc to just be skipped over for av1 (which is supposed to have a bitsteam freeze by this march).
    Hevc's been fairly disappointing,imho.
  • Murloc - Saturday, September 24, 2016 - link

    HEVC has been good for me, stuff takes so much less space.

    Good that another innovation is coming fast
  • DanNeely - Friday, September 23, 2016 - link

    I really hope the Xen enthusiast chipset is a completely different design. While perfectly acceptable for its intended market, if the B350 is just a slightly cut down version of the big one, they're going to be painfully behind in the high end mobo feature checkboxing race in comparison to Intels much larger high end offerings.
  • kn00tcn - Friday, September 23, 2016 - link

    zen* you've been dreaming of halflife too much

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