Today marks the initial start of AMD’s pre-sale of 2nd Generation Ryzen processors. The full launch is set for April 19th, which is when reviews and performance numbers will be officially available, but today we are able to tell you a bit about the processors that are coming, as well as some pictures, and link readers to where they can pre-order. We’re not overly fond of manufacturers offering pre-orders before revealing performance numbers, as with the Threadripper launch last year, however we can at least discuss the details of each part.

First Stop: Ryzen 7 and Ryzen 5 on 12nm

The launch on April 19th will consist of four processors: two from the Ryzen 7 line, with eight cores and sixteen threads, and two from the Ryzen 5 line, with six cores and twelve threads.  These processors are built on GlobalFoundries' 12nm process, which uses some slight process changes to enable up to 10% better performance when directly porting a 14nm design (as AMD is doing here), which means that compared to the previous generation, the new parts have slightly higher frequencies.

2nd Generation AMD Ryzen
AnandTech Cores Base Turbo L2 L3 TDP SEP Cooler
Ryzen 7 2700X 8 / 16 3.7 4.3 4 MB 16 MB 105 W $329 Prism RGB
Ryzen 7 2700 8 / 16 3.2 4.1 4 MB 16 MB 65 W $299 Spire RGB
Ryzen 5 2600X 6 / 12 3.6 4.2 3 MB 16 MB 95 W $229 Spire
Ryzen 5 2600 6 / 12 3.4 3.9 3 MB 16 MB 65 W $199 Stealth

The king of the stack will be AMD’s Ryzen 7 2700X processor, with a suggested retail price of $329.

The underlying design of this processor is identical to the Ryzen 7 1700X, with the same number of cores and same amount of cache, but with much higher frequencies: AMD will ship this part with a 3.7 GHz base frequency and a 4.3 GHz turbo frequency. This means AMD is able to surpass the ‘hard’ limit of 4.1 GHz with the previous generation, and now offer a processor that turbos +200 MHz more, for another 10W on the TDP. At the $329 price, AMD will also throw in its new Wraith Prism LED cooler which it introduced back with the Ryzen APUs. It’s worth taking a look at this cooler in the images below.

Users might note that this is called the 2700X, whereas the top of the pile in the previous generation was called 1800X. We know the reasons why, but they are technically under embargo until the 19th. What we can say is that the previous model of XFR, whereby the CPU can boost beyond its turbo frequency, has been replaced. More details on the 19th.

Following the 2700X is the Ryzen 7 2700, or non-X model. This part is slightly lower clocked, with 3.2 GHz base and 4.1 GHz turbo, mainly because it occupies the 65W TDP space, and comes bundled with the Wraith Spire LED cooler. At $299 it becomes an interesting counter to the 2700X: the difference in $30 means an extra +500 MHz on the base and the beefier cooler. On paper this looks like an upsell – where the Ryzen 7 1700 was a nice buy compared to the 1700X/1800X, here the 2700’s redeeming feature is more the lower power consumption while still retaining high single clock frequencies. It will be interesting to take this CPU for a spin.

The Ryzen 5 2600X and 2600 fill in at the six-core level, at the $229 and $199 price points respectively. These parts are more like their first generation cousins, offering 95W/65W, but now also both come with coolers. The frequencies on the Ryzen 5 2600X are also nice and high, with a 3.6 GHz base and a 4.2 GHz turbo. The Ryzen 5 2600 is quite close behind, with only 3.4 GHz base, but a bit more off the top at 3.9 GHz. Both processors use a 3+3 core configuration for each CCX, and have full access to all 16 MB of L3 cache.

The Comparison

If we take the Ryzen 7 2700X up against the Ryzen 7 1800X and Ryzen 1700X, the following differences are:

Generation to Generation Comparison
AnandTech Cores Base Turbo L2 L3 TDP SEP Cooler
Ryzen 7 2700X 8 / 16 3.7 4.3 4 MB 16 MB 105 W $329 Prism RGB
 
Ryzen 7 1800X 8 / 16 3.6 4.0 4 MB 16 MB 95 W $349 None
Ryzen 7 1700X 8 / 16 3.4 3.8 4 MB 16 MB 95 W $309 None
Ryzen 7 1700 8 / 16 3.0 3.7 4 MB 16 MB 65 W $299 Spire RGB

As seen, the Ryzen 7 2700X clearly takes up the mantle of both of the older parts. More frequency, a better cooler, and there's some other special second generation stuff we can't mention yet.

Key Features

At this point, AMD is keeping most of the nice features under wraps. We can’t talk about them, as much as we would like to. AMD only offers this slide to whet the appetite:

Worth noting are the bullet points. Here is our handy decoder:

  • Zen+ Architecture: Built on 12nm with other hardware tweaks (more on 19th)
  • First Processor on 12nm: On GlobalFoundries' 12nm
  • New Wraith Prism Cooler: Still no word on separate sales
  • Wraith Cooler on all 2nd Gen Processors: Some 1st Gen had no cooler bundled
  • New AMD X470 Chipset: See Below
  • AMD StoreMI Technology: More on the 19th
  • Generational Compatibility: CPUs will work in X370 with BIOS updates

I like the fact that AMD is bundling decent stock coolers with all of its parts. This arguably removes the need for any sub-$20 cooler on the market, unless you buy a chip from Intel. If there was ever a prominent value-add to a processor purchase, this would be it.

Wraith Prism (LED)

Part of this unboxing/sales embargo means we can look at what comes with the processors. AMD shipped us two motherboards, two retail-boxed* CPUs (the 2700X and 2600X), and some G.Skill SniperX DDR4-3200 C16 memory.

*There is a disclaimer on the retail-boxed part here. Our samples look completely retail, aside from two things: the serial number on the box is #1234567891234, which is clearly filled in, but also our CPUs say ‘2017’ on them. This is interesting as it would mean that AMD has had retail-ready silicon since 2017. Either that or the heatspreader printing/etching did not tick over its counter.

Diving straight into the cooler: AMD’s Wraith Prism is an upgrade over the previous Wraith Max with a four-heatpipe direct-contact design as well as a copper coated and flattened base.

This is a nice positive for a CPU cooler, and will certainly help with thermals (even if our sample wasn't a complete mirror finish). The aluminium fins are as with previous Wraith designs, however the fan has been upgraded. It comes with two modes, low and high, with the high mode offering a +1000 RPM boost to the top RPM. For users not concerned with fan noise, this just offers a little more.

There are two connectors available, with bundled cables, for either RGB LED 5050 control on a dedicated header and the motherboard manufacturer software, or connection via a USB header. Having both options is good (I couldn’t see a physical LED off switch), although the USB header cable means either reaching behind the motherboard and up the bottom to get it, removing one of the USB 2.0 headers, or going over the graphics card and making a cabling mess. In our testing we use one USB 2.0 header for our mouse/keyboard arrangement, and on one of the motherboards there was not another header spare.

Nonetheless this cooler is a nice chunk of metal, and come shipped with the 105W Ryzen 7 2700X.

X470 Motherboards

For our reviews, AMD shipped us two motherboards: the ASUS ROG Crosshair VII Hero (Wi-Fi) and the MSI X470 Gaming M7 AC. These will be two of the high-end halo motherboards to focus on the new X470 chipset.


Katamari loves motherboards. Or just loves sitting on my review samples. (ed: it's the latter)

Technically the details of the chipset are also covered by the April 19th embargo, so we cannot mention exactly what makes them different to the X370 platform until then. What we can say is that the X470 isn't directly replacing X370; AMD has stated to us that they expect X370 and X470 to be sold alongside each other.

ASUS ROG Crosshair VII Hero

The first board we opened was the ASUS ROG Crosshair VII Hero (Wi-Fi), with the box well and truly battered either by shipping or how it was stored.

At first glance we already see a few notable features: a combined 12-phase power delivery (likely 10+2) on the CPU, with dual M.2 slots and reinforced PCIe for x8/x8 SLI operation. The rear IO panel is pre-attached to the system with the shroud, and there is a small cable connecting the integrated LEDs on the motherboard.

The socket is the same as before: AM4 with 1331 holes for the processor. The latch mechanism is the same, as are the cooler dimensions.

ASUS has added a number of RGB headers on the board, as well as what looks like easy-to-use voltage read points or points to enable any 5V operation (such as cold-cathode lighting?).

With the two M.2 sockets, one will be PCIe 3.0 x4 from the CPU and the other is PCIe 2.0 x4 from the chipset. For other storage needs, there are six SATA ports as well.

Onboard are a variety of USB 3.1, USB 3.0, and USB 2.0 ports and headers, although I found it quite amusing that ASUS decided to put ‘native USB’ on this header to signify that it is from the chipset and not from a controller. This has benefits for VR that requires native ports, allowing the user to put front panel connectors into the native USB headers.

Being a halo board, ASUS has put in its SupremeFX audio configuration. This is based on a custom Realtek ALC1220A codec, Nichicon audio capacitors, an EMI shield, PCB separation, and bundled software.

On the back we get ASUS BIOS Flashback button, such that users can upgrade the BIOS without the CPU/GPU/DRAM installed, a Clear CMOS button, the 802.11ac Wi-Fi, two USB 2.0 ports, a combination PS/2 port, eight USB 3.0 ports, two USB 3.1 ports (one Type-C), the gigabit Ethernet port, and the audio jacks.

MSI X470 Gaming M7 AC

By contrast, the MSI X470 Gaming M7 AC box was not bashed up, and showed the picture of the motherboard directly on the front. Normally we are used to seeing MSI and the ‘ACK’ moniker on some of its Gaming M7 motherboards with Wi-Fi, to indicate using a Killer network controller, but not here.

The first look at the board shows something a little less heavy on the styling than the ASUS, although MSI is still pushing a bit of an angled look. The obvious features are the DRAM supports, the multitude of chokes in the power delivery, and that dual-fingered chipset heatsink which hides two M.2 slots.

A close up of the DRAM ‘cover’ shows that this is how MSI is evolving its reinforced memory slot concept. We can argue if reinforcing memory slots is actually worth anything (it certainly helps PCIe), but here it can contribute to the aesthetic.

I’m counting 14 chokes on this motherboard, which would make it one of the biggest power delivery options on any AM4 motherboard. The power delivery heatsinks are not connected together, perhaps indicative of cost or MSI’s confidence in the power delivery efficiency. It is worth noting that MSI uses dual 8-pin power for the CPU here, compared to the 8+4-pin arrangement on the ASUS ROG.

One of the more esoteric features of recent MSI motherboards is this big knob, which goes all the way up to 11. This is MSI’s Game Boost overclocking feature, designed such that each twist gives a bigger overclock boost to the processor. In the past these features are often overly harsh to most processors, in an effort to encapsulate as many as possible, and in the past we’ve never been able to go much beyond the ‘2’ setting on air cooling. Luckily there are power/reset buttons right next to it.

MSI’s Audio Boost 6 branding for the audio is almost like the others: a Realtek ALC1220 codec with specialized audio capacitors, an EMI shield, and PCB separation. MSI’s add here is in the software, using a license from a company called Nahimic to offer various EQ adjustments and in-game benefits.

Like the ASUS, MSI offers a BIOS update feature without the CPU/GPU/DRAM installed. On the rest of the rear panel we get two USB 2.0 ports, a combination PS/2 port, four USB 3.0 ports, the 802.11ac Wi-Fi module, two USB 3.1 ports, the gigabit Ethernet port, and the audio jacks.

A couple of interesting things to note on the rear of the board - around the chipset heatsink area, MSI has placed this warning about keeping case standoffs away from the bottom of the board. Because most cases are designed to house all sorts of motherboard form factors, users that take older cases and do not remove the unneeded standoffs can result in short circuits and possibly ruined hardware. Although if a user doesn’t remove the older standoffs, I doubt they will bother reading the rear of the motherboard.

Here’s a handy addition to some motherboards: this tells you how many PCB layers there are. In this case, six. To put that into context, the cheapest motherboards usually have three or four, most mainstream boards will have six or sometimes eight, while high-end desktop usually require eight or ten. Money-no-object motherboards, like server systems, can have twelve. Additional features, like double copper or high-humidity protection, can add +50% each to the cost of the pure PCB.

The Base Line

AMD will launch four new 2nd Generation Ryzen processors on April 19th, with pre-orders starting today. The top end processor, the Ryzen 7 2700X, will have a suggested retail price of $329, and come bundled with the new Wraith Prism RGB cooler. Based on the processor specifications, using the new 12nm process from GlobalFoundries has given the base core design some extra headroom for peak frequency, and it would appear that yield is good given the $329 peak price being well below the $499 initial pricing of the previous generation high end processor. There are other details about the process and the core design, however those are still under embargo.

Full reviews will be available from April 19th.  


Summer has already chosen her processor

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  • JustinTeim - Friday, April 13, 2018 - link

    Any word on ECC support ?
  • UrQuan3 - Friday, April 13, 2018 - link

    Seconded. I've never been able to find a list of Ryzen + MB combos that support ECC, just one-off comments about certain boards.
  • leexgx - Friday, April 13, 2018 - link

    same as ryzen 1 , it supports it but its upto you to find out what motherboard its enabled on and supported ram (just putting ECC ram in does not mean its enabled, it will work just without the ECC)
  • iter - Friday, April 13, 2018 - link

    AMD is kind enough to not disable it, but mobo vendors are not gutsy enough to validate it, even the ones that seem to support it. I guess it will make intel unhappy, and it does have a sweet time asking a 50% extra for xeons...
  • JustinTeim - Friday, April 13, 2018 - link

    @iter, Understood, thank you. The 2700x specs are impressive for the price, but there is still a market segment that will walk away from "gaming" motherboards and "do you feel lucky" ECC support.
  • iter - Friday, April 13, 2018 - link

    Those who feel lucky don't need ECC to begin with :)

    It is understandable that mobo vendors don't want to angry intel, but at the very least amd could make a board or two, validate ECC support and sell those under their own brand.

    AMD's current marketing strategy is quite dumb really. Even tho they have a suitable product, they don't really address the workstation market. EPYC clocks are too low, even for the 8 and 16 core parts, and only the 24 and 32 parts offer decent workstation performance, but only in tasks that can benefit from that many cores.

    A glimpse at threadripper suggests that a 16 core 3.2 GHz base clock EPYC part should be possible, yet the clocks of existing SKUs are 1+ GHz lower.

    There is huge demand for 8-16 core higher clocked CPUs with ECC support, it is something in which AMD can simply slay intel. Yet they don't, they keep marketing their chips at gamers, which is dumb since that chip was designed to do more and is not as efficient at gaming as intel chips.

    So people are stuck buying xeons, which are priced by intel with such impudence, even the "workstation" grade single socket models.

    Silly, silly AMD. Especially when you can get an 8 core ryzen for the cost of a 4 core xeon at similar clocks. And ECC memory premium is very low currently.
  • shadowx360 - Friday, April 13, 2018 - link

    Can’t agree more. I needed a replacement build with ECC and ended up buying a used Xeon due to poor ECC support with Ryzen motherboards. Next build I would like to go AMD and hopefully in 3 years they have it figured out.
  • flgt - Friday, April 13, 2018 - link

    I would think the problem with official workstations is the validation effort with certain tool flows. I'm sure this is a costly step that might be the first thing a cash poor company like AMD would remove to cut corners.
  • karpodiem - Friday, April 13, 2018 - link

    A thousand times - THIS. Why is this so hard for AMD to understand? I don't want the overpriced Xeon D garbage, I'd like to use the 2700X with a non-gaming board and ECC!
  • Ratman6161 - Monday, April 16, 2018 - link

    I don't need ECC personally but this discussion got me curios so I checked Asrock's web site for my motherboard (AB350 Pro 4) and looked at their memory QVL. Sure enough, they do actually list some ECC modules...though only 2. One Samsung 8GB DDR4 2133 and one Crucial 8GB DDR4 2400.

    My particular board isn't really one you would select in the first place if you were doing work where ECC was required. So I was actually a little surprised to see it.

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