AMD Ryzen 3 7320U Surfaces, Possibly the “Mendocino” SoC


One of AMD’s big announcements this fall has been its entry-level “Mendocino” Ryzen 3 mobile processor, which enables the company to compete with Intel’s latest-generation Pentium Gold-powered notebooks by combining older-generation IP with the latest I/O and fabrication node. The chip has possibly surfaced on the UserBenchmark database, as the Ryzen 3 7320U processor.

Built on the TSMC N6 (6 nm) silicon fabrication process, the “Mendocino” features a 4-core/8-thread CPU based on the older “Zen 2” microarchitecture. This CPU is a single CCX with four “Zen 2” cores sharing a 4 MB L3 cache. It features an iGPU based on the latest RDNA2 graphics architecture, but with just two compute units (128 stream processors). The chip also features a single-channel DDR5 memory interface, and a PCI-Express Gen 3 interface with four PCIe 3.0 general-purpose lanes, besides some USB and display outputs.