Tech

Five things you should know about AMD’s Ryzen 7000

In our analysis of the Ryzen 9 7900X and Ryzen 5 7600X we had the opportunity to see all the keys to this new generation of AMD processors, and also to the accompanying platform, known as AM5. In general terms performance results were very positiveand the truth is that I did not have any problem with the motherboard or with the BIOS, maybe because the motherboard that I used, a GIGABYTE AORUS Master X670E, had a higher maturity.

However, I understand that the analysis is very extensive and that filtering so much information can be complicated even despite the accompanying graphs and images, which explain it in a much more visual way. That is why I wanted to shape this article where I am going to share with you five things you should know about AMD’s Ryzen 7000, and that will help you to be clearer everything they offer and how they position these new processors.

To make this article more interesting I will also share with you some conclusions that I have been able to draw after performing these analyses. As always, if you have any questions after reading the article, you can leave it in the comments and I will be happy to help you solve it.

1.-The Ryzen 7000 have regained the crown of performance

cinebench r23 performance

And they have done it both in single thread and multithread. The single-thread performance improvement achieved by the Ryzen 9 7900X compared to the Core i9-12900K is 5.46% in Cinebench R23a figure that transferred to games translates into a small but enough difference to give the performance crown to this generation and to the Zen 4 architecture.

In multithreading, the Ryzen 7000 have also prevailed over the Core Gen12. Thanks to the improvement that AMD has introduced at the IPC and working frequency level, the Ryzen 9 7900X, which has 12 cores and 24 threads, is able to beat the Core i9-12900K in Cinebench R23 by 1.13%. It is a small difference, but important because the latter has 16 cores and 24 threads.

If we focus on games, the Ryzen 7000 they do not achieve an absolute victory in all the testsin fact they lose in some titles and win in others, but making an average assessment they are a little more powerful than Intel’s Core Gen12.

2.-AMD has increased consumption, but it’s not that bad

Various rumors and leaks said that consumption had skyrocketed with the Ryzen 7000, and it is true that this has increased compared to the previous generation, but it is not as high as said information indicatedand in the end AMD has been able to stay at a lower level than Intel’s Core Gen12.

The Ryzen 5 7600X slightly exceeds 100 watts when running at full load, and the Ryzen 9 7900X maintains, on average, below 170 watts of consumption also with a load of 100%. As I said, they are higher figures than those registered by their equivalents in the Ryzen 5000 series, but they continue to remain at very good levels against direct competition.

Obviously if we decide to overclock we will get into higher consumption levels, but as we will see later this is not worth it at all. On the other hand also we can activate the “Eco” mode if we are very concerned about the issue of consumption.

3.-The overclock has practically lost all its meaning

And for a very simple reason, how well turbo mode scales in the Ryzen 7000. AMD has released these processors with excellent frequency tuning, and has tuned the maximum so that the turbo mode can reach very high levels even when the processor works with all its cores and threads.

Overclocking may allow us to reach 100 or 200 MHz more frequency compared to the maximum of the turbo mode with all the cores and threads active, but we will be increasing the consumption and temperatures, of work, and by fixing the frequency of the processor to a concrete frequency we will lose performance when it works with few cores and threads simultaneously.

I personally believe that the best thing for almost any user is leave them at stock frequencies with the PBO on autoand this seems positive to me because it greatly simplifies the overall user experience.

4.-The temperatures they reach are very high

It was another rumor that in the end has been confirmed. The Ryzen 9 7900X remains at totally safe levels when working with applications that do not use all of its cores and threads, such as games, where it is around 72 degrees on average. However, when we put it at full load reaches 95 degrees and remains stable at that figure.

Taking into account that these temperatures were reached using one 360mm AIO liquid cooling kita high-end model, it is clear that it is a high value, and that with less powerful cooling systems we could end up having problems due to excess heat.

The Ryzen 5 7600X has only 6 cores and 12 threads, which means that its working temperatures are not that high, in fact it does not usually exceed 70 degrees when working with games, but when used with an intensive load (100% use of CPU) reaches 89 degrees. This shows that we could also have problems if we do not use a quality cooling system.

5.-The Ryzen 7000 do not compete with Alder Lake-S, but with Raptor Lake-S

This is a very important detail that we must be very clear about, in fact I focused my analysis of the Ryzen 7000 on comparing them with the Ryzen 5000 precisely for that reason, because its rival is not the Core Gen12, but the Core Gen13a generation of processors whose launch is scheduled for the end of this year.

We have already told you about them before, we know that will maintain the division into high-performance cores and high-efficiency cores, and that they will be configured with up to 24 cores and 32 threads. This means that Intel will surpass AMD in maximum core count, although with nuances, since of those 24 cores only 8 will be high-performance, the other 16 will be high-efficiency. By contrast, the Ryzne 9 7950X has 16 high-performance cores.

It will be interesting to see who wins this “war” to become the most powerful generation of processors in the general consumer market. My first impressions with Ryzen 7000 have been positive, but if I’m honest I am becoming more and more clear that this time Intel is going to take the cat to the water with Raptor Lake-Salthough the difference between the two it won’t be very big.

Related Articles

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *