AMD Ryzen 7000 “Zen 4” CPUs & AM5 Platform Pushed Back To 27th September, The Same Day As Intel’s 13th Gen Raptor Lake Unveil
Earlier this month, we reported that AMD was going to host an event in late August where they will announce all the details such as specs and prices for their next-gen Ryzen 7000 “Zen 4” CPUs and the respective AM5 platform. The company had also planned to open up sales just two weeks later on the 15th of September. But it looks like AMD has decided to halt the sales a bit and position the real launch next to Intel’s 13th Gen Raptor Lake CPUs on the 27th of September. Intel is expected to host its “Innovation” event on the 27th of September where the company will unveil its latest desktop processors codenamed Raptor Lake. The CPUs won’t be available until October however, AMD’s Ryzen 7000 CPUs will be ready for the mass consumer market. This may seem like AMD being very confident to launch their chips right when their competitor announces their next-gen parts. At the same time, online retailers have started listing down several AMD Ryzen 7000 CPUs along with preliminary prices such as the:
Ryzen 9 7950X (16 Core / 32 Thread) Ryzen 9 7900X (12 Core / 24 Thread) Ryzen 7 7700X (8 Core / 16 Thread) Ryzen 5 7600X (6 Core / 12 Thread)
AMD’s first wave of 600-series motherboards would focus on the higher-end X670E & X670 designs followed by B650E & B650 products a few weeks later (around October/November). The new CPUs will feature a brand new Zen 4 core architecture which is expected to deliver up to 8% IPC, >15% ST (Single-Threaded), and >35% MT (Multi-Threaded) performance improvement over the Zen 3 cores. Additionally, AMD is going bonkers with the clock speeds on their next-gen CPUs with up to 5.7 GHz boost clocks, 170W TDPs and 230W PPT. Plus, the platform itself will be outfitted with the latest technologies such as PCIe Gen 5.0 slots, Gen 5.0 M.2 support, DDR5 memory support (EXPO), and a new SAS (Smart Access Storage) Firmware suite that runs on the DirectStorage API framework. AMD Ryzen ‘Zen 4’ Desktop CPU Expected Features:
Up To 16 Zen 4 Cores and 32 Threads Over 15% Performance Uplift In Single-Threaded Apps Brand New Zen 4 CPU Cores (IPC / Architectural Improvements) Brand New TSMC 5nm process node with 6nm IOD 25% Performance Per Watt Improvement Vs Zen 3 >35% Overall Performance Improvement Vs Zen 3 8-10% Instructions Per Clock (IPC) Improvement Vs Zen 3 Support on AM5 Platform With LGA1718 Socket New X670E, X670, B650E, B650 Motherboards Dual-Channel DDR5 Memory Support Up To DDR5-5600 Native (JEDEC) Speeds 28 PCIe Lanes (CPU Exclusive) 105-120W TDPs (Upper Bound Range ~170W)
You can find the full details of AMD’s next-gen Ryzen 7000 Desktop CPUs and the respective 600-series motherboards in our full roundup of the next-gen family here.