![]() Stock PPT is 88W, and in common stress tests that aren't P95 (which still obeys PPT at stock) will pull up to that without PBO. Don't forget, a modest old Ryzen5 1600X is a 95W chip. You're not getting the performance potential you paid for, but it won't melt anything nor will it invalidate any warranties - the board is designed (and warranty must be honoured) to manage 105W CPUs and the CPU is designed to run in a board that only delivers 105W. Yes, a 3950X will POST and boot on a cheapo, garbage-tier $60 B450 board with no VRM heatsinks. Peak boost speeds are nice to have with PBO+ on an overclocking-focused motherboard, but Zen2 will get 95% of the way there at very tame voltages with bone-stock settings. Would it surprise you to hear that the 3700X running at stock in a board with AMD-recommended PPT, TDC, EDC limits will only pull around 40-50W in most loads? The 65W TDP is generally a result of heavy voltage boost for higher single-core clocks, and at 'stock' PBO settings and power limits, Zen2 actually runs at lower power on more modest multi-core voltages and clocks typical of most real-world use cases. The processor features AMD PRO feature-set that make it fit for use in commercial desktops in large business environments. The Ryzen G is expected to be the top desktop SKU based on the 7 nm "Renoir" silicon that features eight "Zen 2" CPU cores, and an iGPU based on the "Vega" graphics architecture, featuring 8 NGCUs amounting to 512 stream processors. This is attributable to the 3700X enjoying four times the 元 cache size. The 3700X has a slight upper hand with multi-core performance, with 9151 points compared to 8228 points of the PRO 4750G. The single-core performance of both the PRO 4750G and 3700X are similar, with the PRO 4750G scoring 1239 points, and the 3700X scoring 1266 points. Both chips were compared on Geekbench 5.2.2. Both are 8-core/16-thread processors based on the "Zen 2" microarchitecture, but while the 3700X has additional 元 cache and added power budget for the CPU cores (as the processor completely lacks an iGPU) the PRO 4750G offers a Radeon Vega 8 iGPU with its engine clock above 2.00 GHz. The processor produced performance figures in the league of the popular Ryzen 7 3700X desktop processor. ![]() AMD's top upcoming Socket AM4 desktop APU, the Ryzen G, was put through Geekbench 5, as discovered by TUM_APISAK. ![]()
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