lightmanek
Senior member
- Feb 19, 2017
- 512
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My 2c:
I'm in the two chiplets for AM4 camp, here is why! Notice how many memory channels we have on fully populated EPYC Rome (8) and how many 8c chiplets there are? Yes, same number! AMD has widened IF to 64b each direction, which in theory, depending on IF clocks, should be enough for dual channel 128bit DDR4, but it would have to be clocked quite high when paired with DDR4 4000+. This might not be the most power efficient solution, plus if there is L4 cache in IO die, it might be underutilised by just single chiplet.
I therefore suspect, AM4 top end Zen 2 CPU's will have 2 chiplets and up to 16 cores.
BTW this is not excluding AMD from creating castrated 2x4 or even 2x2 cores SKU's, but I think more likely we will get 2x4c at the bottom for R5 family and 1x4c or 1x6c for R3 family with lower official memory speed support.
I'm in the two chiplets for AM4 camp, here is why! Notice how many memory channels we have on fully populated EPYC Rome (8) and how many 8c chiplets there are? Yes, same number! AMD has widened IF to 64b each direction, which in theory, depending on IF clocks, should be enough for dual channel 128bit DDR4, but it would have to be clocked quite high when paired with DDR4 4000+. This might not be the most power efficient solution, plus if there is L4 cache in IO die, it might be underutilised by just single chiplet.
I therefore suspect, AM4 top end Zen 2 CPU's will have 2 chiplets and up to 16 cores.
BTW this is not excluding AMD from creating castrated 2x4 or even 2x2 cores SKU's, but I think more likely we will get 2x4c at the bottom for R5 family and 1x4c or 1x6c for R3 family with lower official memory speed support.