It’s well and truly obvious that despite being held back by the system memory it’s still not enough for Intel and their clockspeed advantage to muster anything in retaliation against the Zen 3 architecture whose IPC proves to be industry leading.
The 5800X is also over 25% faster than its predecessor, the 3800X. Judging these single-core scores it’s clear to see that the Ryzen 7 5800X is at the very least 11% faster in the single-threaded scores over the Intel Core i9-10900K which has a single core boost frequency of 5.3GHz. This system despite being hampered by utterly garbage system memory that’s certainly bound to impact upon its raw performance the Ryzen 7 5800X still manages to rip CPU-Z single threaded benchmark apart scoring 650 points
A CPU-Z validation page has been spotted of AMD’s Ryzen 7 5800X.įollowing the valid.x86 link we’re met with the Ryzen 7 5800X paired with a Gigabyte B550M Aorus Pro motherboard and 32GB of total system memory in a 4×8 configuration at 2348MHz with CL timings of 17-17-17-39.Ĭertainly far from ideal as I’ve expressed in the past just how dependent the Zen architecture has always been on the highest possible memory frequencies with the lowest possible latency which has a substantial implication on memory latency and overall performance in majority of applications.
In yet another act of total domination of AMD’s upcoming Zen 3 processors it would seem that AMD intends to phase out the usage of CPU-Z’s inbuilt benchmark for the personal use of Intel and their many fangays.