Film-Updates Werbeplakat nach Fan-Feedback 7000 Nicht-X-Prozessor-SKUs mit 65 W TDP bestätigt, Kühlboxen


Vor ihrem Marktdebüt Anfang Januar, Wir haben eine Bestätigung der Spezifikationen der drei kommenden AMD Ryzen erhalten 7000 Nicht-X-Prozessor-SKUs der Serie. There will indeed only be three new SKUs, the 6-core/12-thread Ryzen 5 7600, the 8-core/16-thread Ryzen 7 7700, and the 12-core/24-thread Ryzen 9 7900; and no 16-core part. All three SKUs have their TDP rated at 65 W, which means that their PIB (processor in box) retail packages will include a stock cooling solution. Die 7600 comes with a Wraith Stealth cooler that’s capable of handling thermal loads of 65 W TDP processors at stock speeds; while the 7700 und 7900 will include a feature-packed Wraith Prism RGB cooler that’s designed for 140 W TDP processors. Since Socket AM5 has cooler compatibility with AM4, AMD could simply be reusing the same coolers it packed with past-generation Ryzen processors.

Der Ryzen 5 7600 comes with an MSRP of USD $229, clock speeds of up to 5.10 GHz-Boost, and targets the likes of the Intel Core i5-13600 or i5-12600. Die $329 MSRP Ryzen 7 7700 ticks at speeds of up to 5.30 GHz-Boost, and is designed to compete with the Core i7-13700 or i7-12700. Der Ryzen 9 7900 has an interesting price tag of $429 (UVP), ticks at speeds of up to 5.40 GHz-Boost, and purportedly competes against the Core i9-13900 (nein-K) and i9-12900. The three chips should be drop-in compatible with Socket AM5 motherboards being sold right now, likely with no need for a BIOS update. Although launch of these three SKUs in January is certain, the company might use the 2023 International CES keynote address by its CEO Dr Lisa Su to either tease or announce the Ryzen 7000X3D processors featuring 3D Vertical Cache memory, which is known to boost gaming performance.