AMD Ryzen 7 Launch Details

The Ryzen family of CPUs is designed to compete, initially, in the performance-mainstream and high-end desktop market. At first will be the launch of Ryzen 7 CPUs, a trio of eight-core, sixteen-thread designs, with Ryzen 5 and Ryzen 3 coming in Q2 and 2H17 respectively. Out of the CPUs we know about, the Ryzen 7 parts, the processors have a TDP of either 65W or 95W, and prices will range from $330 to $500.

AMD Ryzen 7 SKUs
  Cores/
Threads
Base/
Turbo
L3 TDP Cost Launch Date
Ryzen 7 1800X 8/16 3.6/4.0 16 MB 95 W $499 3/2/2017
Ryzen 7 1700X 8/16 3.4/3.8 16 MB 95 W $399 3/2/2017
Ryzen 7 1700 8/16 3.0/3.7 16 MB 65 W $329 3/2/2017

All the processors will be using the AM4 socket, with bases frequencies from 3.2 GHz to 3.6 GHz, and turbo frequencies up to 4.0 GHz for the high-end parts. The base design supports 512KB of private L2 cache per core and 2MB of a shared exclusive L3 victim cache.

The CPUs follow a naming scheme which most CPU enthusiasts will be familiar with:

  • The high-end parts are ‘Ryzen 7’, which all happen to be eight-core parts and start around $300-$320. With a fully enabled chip, 16MB of L3 cache is available.
  • In the mid-range are ‘Ryzen 5’ processors, set to be launched in Q2, which are all eight-core parts under the hood but are either 6-core parts or 4-core parts depending on the model.  Leaks would tend to suggest that despite having two cores disabled, the 6-core parts still have access to all the L3 cache.
  • At the bottom are ‘Ryzen 3’, due 2H17, all of which are quad core parts but do not have hyperthreading.
  • All parts support overclocking.
  • Technically all parts support XFR, although only X can overclock with XFR (more on this later)
  • It’s worth noting that ‘Ryzen 7 1900X’ is a gap waiting to be filled.

The formal name for these CPUs is ‘Ryzen 7’ followed by the SKU number. Having conversations with AMD, and noting that I suspect these names will colloquially be shortened to R7, R5 and R3 very quickly, we will be following convention and using the formal CPU names.

All these parts come from a single silicon design, with binning to ensure that the quality of each silicon die gets placed in the right bin. It is worth noting AMD’s tactics to launch a handful of SKUs at once follows on from its previous strategy. Part of it is a function of size (AMD by contrast to other players is actually small), and it allows AMD to react to how the market changes, as well as adjust product lines due to factors in the production (such as better semi-con characteristics).

All the CPUs are multiplier unlocked, allowing users to go overclocking when paired with the X370 or B350 chipset. At this point we’re unsure what the upper limit is for the multiplier. We have been told that all CPUs will also support XFR, whereby the CPU automatically adjusts the frequency rather than the OS based on P-states, but the CPUs with ‘X’ in the name allow the CPU to essentially overclock over the turbo frequency. XFR stands for ‘eXtended Frequency Range’, and indicates that the CPU will automatically overclock itself if it has sufficient thermal and power headroom. We’ll mention it later, but XFR works in jumps of 25 MHz by adjusting the multiplier, which also means that the multiplier is adjustable in 0.25x jumps (as they have 100 MHz base frequency). XFR does have an upper limit, which is processor dependent. All CPUs will support 25 MHz jumps though XFR above the P0 state, but only X CPUs will go beyond the turbo frequency.

A side note: As to be expected, XFR only works correctly if the correct setting in the BIOS is enabled. At this point the option seems to be hidden, but if exposed it means it is up to the motherboard manufacturers to enable it by default – so despite it being an AMD feature, it could end up at the whim of the motherboard manufacturers. I suspect we will see some boards with XFR enabled automatically, and some without. We had the same issue on X99 with Turbo Boost 3, and Multi-Core Turbo.

So Why No Ryzen 5 or Ryzen 3?

AMD is remaining relatively quiet on the other Ryzen CPUs. At the Tech Day, we were told about one other CPU: the Ryzen 5 1600X.

AMD Ryzen SKUs
  Cores/
Threads
Base/
Turbo
L3 TDP Cost Launch Date
Ryzen 7 1800X 8/16 3.6/4.0 16 MB 95 W $499 3/2/2017
Ryzen 7 1700X 8/16 3.4/3.8 16 MB 95 W $399 3/2/2017
Ryzen 7 1700 8/16 3.0/3.7 16 MB 65 W $329 3/2/2017
Ryzen 5 1600X 6/12? 3.6/4.0 16 MB? ? W N/A Q2 2017
Ryzen 3 ? 4/4? ? 8 MB? ? W N/A H2 2017

This six-core part will have two CPU cores disabled, though it is unclear if AMD will disable one core per cluster of four (giving a 3+3 arrangement) or if they could disable two from one cluster (giving 2+4). Nonetheless, it maintains the 3.6 GHz base frequency and 4.0 GHz turbo frequency similar to the Ryzen 7 1800X. This puts it square in the firing line of the Core i7-6850K (six core, Broadwell-E) and Core i7-5930K (six core, Haswell-E).

Ryzen 5 is scheduled for ‘Q2’, meaning the second quarter of 2017, or April-to-June inclusive. The big event in that time frame in the PC world is Computex at the beginning of June, which might be an apt time to launch some other products as well. The scale of the Ryzen 5 launch is unknown, and I suspect that if the demand for Ryzen 7 is high then AMD might not have enough CPUs to go around. If enough parts come out of the Fab working well, and Ryzen 7 is still selling strong, then we might have to wait for Ryzen 5. This aids part of AMD’s trickle-out strategy, though based on some of the comments we’re seeing online, Ryzen 5 is also highly anticipated.

The Ryzen 3 family is even more unknown. At this point the leaks suggest that these will be quad core parts without simultaneous multi-threading, however AMD has not released any information as to how they will work. The only thing we know is that AMD is planning a H2'17 launch, meaning the second half of 2017. That’s a very, very wide window, encompassing things like the Server chips launch but also the notebook SoCs. I suspect AMD will be constantly looking at their product lines and sales, determining what opportunities there are for Ryzen 3 CPUs – if they get a full launch or end up a footnote if the rest of the stack performs above expectations. Or Ryzen 3 could end up mobile only, but that’s just a low-chance hypothesis.

I saw Ryzen Pro being in the leaks?

At this time AMD is not announcing any Pro parts, although it was confirmed to be that there are plans to continue the Pro line of CPUs with Ryzen to be launched at a later time. These parts will be similar in practice to previous ‘Pro’ models we saw with Kaveri and Carrizo: designed for the big OEMs as an indication of large-contract support. AMD’s prominent partners for this are HP, Lenovo and Dell. These processors will most likely not be sold to the public, although OEM resellers typically get hold of a few. That means availability at this point is unknown. AMD states that multiplier overclocking is supported on all processors, however at the time of writing we’re unsure if that would naturally include the ‘Pro’ line. My gut instinct says ‘probably’, although the systems these CPUs will go into will likely have overclocking disabled, so it would have to be placed into a consumer motherboard.

A side note on ECC: given the design of Naples and the fact that it should be supporting ECC, this means that the base memory controller in the silicon should be able to support ECC. We know that it is disabled for the consumer parts, but nothing has been said regarding the Pro parts. We can confirm that ECC is enabled on the consumer Ryzen parts.

The Competition

Just after Tech Day, I ran a twitter poll regarding comparisons that my followers were interested in. The poll results were as follows:

 

 

That’s

  • 32% for the Ryzen 7 1800X vs Core i7-7700K,
  • 31% for the Ryzen 7 1700 vs Core i7-7700K
  • 25% for the Ryzen 7 1800X vs Core i7-6900K
  • 11% for the Ryzen 7 1700 vs Core i7-2600K
  • Mentions for
    • Core i3-7350K numbers,
    • Core i5-7600K numbers,
    • Ryzen 5 1600X numbers (no can do before R5 launch)
    • 1800X vs i7-5960X,
    • 1700X vs 7700K,
    • 1700X vs 6900K,
    • DRAM testing,
    • single thread testing,
    • Maximum OC on each Ryzen part
    • SPEC06 vs A10
    • Dual Core Ryzen at 800 MHz vs Core m3 to simulate passive tablets

Naturally AMD has suggested processors which it feels offer direct competition against the various Ryzen CPUs. These are as follows:

Comparison: Ryzen 7 1800X vs Core i7-6900K
AMD
Ryzen 7 1800X
Features Intel
Core i7-6900K
8 / 16 Cores/Threads 8 / 16
3.6 / 4.0 GHz Base/Turbo 3.2 / 3.7GHz
16 PCIe 3.0 Lanes 40
16 MB L3 Cache 20 MB
95 W TDP 140 W
$499 Price (MSRP) $1049

At the top end we see the eight-core R7 1800X put directly against a Broadwell-E based eight-core Core i7-6900K. The Ryzen 7 1800X sits at 3.6 GHz base and 4.0 GHz turbo for 95W, while the Core i7-6900X is 3.2G/3.7G for 140W. The i7-6900K has the bigger L3 cache and more PCIe lanes, but costs twice as much ($1049 vs. $499).

Comparison: Ryzen 7 1700 vs Core i7-7700K
AMD
Ryzen 7 1700
Features Intel
Core i7-7700K
8 / 16 Cores/Threads 4 / 8
3.0 / 3.7 GHz Base/Turbo 4.2 / 4.5 GHz
16 PCIe 3.0 Lanes 16
16 MB L3 Cache 8MB
65 W TDP 91 W
$329 Price (MSRP) $350

In the mid-range, the Ryzen 7 1700 is so near in price to the Core i7-7700K that it is hard to miss. The i7-7700K is based on Intel’s latest Kaby Lake microarchitecture, which AMD has already shown is ahead of the game compared to Zen. So while Intel gets a frequency advantage (4.2G/4.5G vs 3.0G/3.7G) and is likely to have a fundamental IPC advantage, the AMD Ryzen 7 1700 comes with eight cores over four, and has 16MB of L3 cache compared to 8MB on Intel. The 1700 and 7700K are similar in price ($330 vs $350) but the 1700 also comes with a new variant of AMD’s high performing Wraith cooler.

Comparison: Ryzen 5 1600X vs Core i5-7600K
AMD
Ryzen 5 1600X
Features Intel
Core i5-7600K
6 / 12 Cores/Threads 4 / 4
3.6 / 4.0 GHz Base/Turbo 3.8 / 4.2GHz
16 PCIe 3.0 Lanes 16
16 MB? L3 Cache 6 MB
? TDP 91W
? Price (MSRP) $239

Because we know some specs already, it’s worth pointing out about the Ryzen 5 1600X. Expected pricing should put it close to the price of the Core i5-7600K, but offering three times as many threads. The Ryzen 5 will be down on frequency, but cache and cores is hard to miss. When we get in the Ryzen 5 samples it is sure to be a major test.

The validity of these comparisons will come down to how well AMD has executed in single core performance, and if having the L3 as an exclusive victim cache actually hampers performance, especially in memory heavy workloads such as compression.

Typically we would expect fewer cores at the same power to be clocked higher as there is TDP to spare. However, these four core designs can differ between two successive chips. The base design of all of these CPUs is a set of eight cores, split into two quad-core ‘Core Complexes’ (known as a CCX). Each CCX has four cores and 8MB of L3 cache, but are still part of the same silicon die and connected by the new Infinity Fabric. For a quad core design, four of those cores (and their L3 caches) are disabled, however it is never guaranteed which ones. Users could end up with 4+0, 1+3 or 2+2 cores active per CCX, which gives a slightly skewed latency response when having to pull memory from other caches. Because the L3 cache is an exclusive victim cache, this won’t happen as often as perhaps an inclusive cache might, but as a result it is expected that the reduce frequency might be to compensate for the different CCX configurations that might exist.

An Interview with Dr. Lisa Su, CEO of AMD Zen: New Core Features
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  • EchoWars - Thursday, March 2, 2017 - link

    No, apparently the failure was in your education, since it's obvious you did not read the article.
  • Notmyusualid - Friday, March 3, 2017 - link

    Ha...
  • sharath.naik - Thursday, March 2, 2017 - link

    I think you missed the biggest news in this information dump. The TDP is the biggest advantage amd has. Which means that for 150watt server cpu. they should be able to cram a lot more cores than intel will be able to.
  • Meteor2 - Friday, March 3, 2017 - link

    ^^^This. I think AMD's strength with Zen is going to be in servers.
  • Sttm - Friday, March 3, 2017 - link

    Yeah I can see that.
  • UpSpin - Thursday, March 2, 2017 - link

    According to a german site, in games, Ryzen is equal (sometimes higher, sometimes lower) to the Intel i7-6900K in high resolution games (WQHD). Once the resolution is set very low (720p) the Ryzen gets beaten by the Intel processor, but honestly, who cares about low resolution? For games, the probably best bet would be the i7-7700K, mainly because of the higher clock rate, for now. Once the games get better optimized for 8 cores, the 4-core i7-7700K will be beaten for sure, because in multi-threaded applications Ryzen is on par with the twice expensive Intel processor.

    I doubt it makes sense to buy the Core i7-6850K, it has the same low turbo boost frequency the 6900K has, thus low single threaded performance, but at only 6 cores. So I expect that it's the worst from both worlds. Poor multi-threaded performance compared to Ryzen, poor single threaded performance compared to i7-7700K.

    We also have to see how well Ryzen can get overclocked, thus improving single core performance.
  • fanofanand - Thursday, March 2, 2017 - link

    That is a well reasoned comment. Kudos!
  • ShieTar - Thursday, March 2, 2017 - link

    Well, the point of low-resolution testing is, that at normal resolutions you will always be GPU-restricted. So not only Ryzen and the i7-6900K are equal in this test, but so are all other modern and half-modern CPUs including any old FX-8...

    The most interesting question will be how Ryzen performs on those few modern games which manage to be CPU-restricted even in relevant resolutions, e.g. Battlefield 1 Multiplayer. But I think it will be a few more days, if not weeks, until we get that kind of in-depth review.
  • FriendlyUser - Thursday, March 2, 2017 - link

    This is true, but at the same time this artificially magnifies the differences one is going to notice in a real-world scenario. I saw reviews with a Titan X at 1080p, while many will be playing 1440p with a 1060 or RX480.

    The test case must also approximate real life.
  • khanikun - Friday, March 3, 2017 - link

    They aren't testing to show what it's like in real life though. The point of testing is to show the difference between the CPUs. Hence why they are gearing their benchmarking to stress the CPU, not other portions of the system.

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