I'd rather not keep arguing about it but it bothers me to see casual disinformation based on opinion and the marketing of TDP numbers. I choose to believe that the author of the Anandtech article not only knows what he's talking about but did quality research that is comparing apples with apples.
WWYBYWB is disingenuous, please don't devolve the conversation like that. I made no aggressive or rude comments before
@Markfw came at me (and I tried to respectfully respond without devolving into name calling).
Respectfully, I'm sorry, but it looks like you are mis-characterizing the article. I don't think it's unclear what they are saying -- Ryzen+ and Ryzen 2 are *not* the same in their power consumption profie:
"...the power consumption of AMD’s first and second generation Ryzen processors has often been parallel to the TDP rating on the box, with the CPU levelling out to the TDP value as we load up the cores with a high energy workload."
"With Ryzen 3000 and Zen 2, AMD’s attachment to TDP was not as clinical as its first two generations of hardware."
"This shows that Zen 2 has a different strategy to the previous Zen chips when it comes to how AMD is mixing the difference between TDP and PPT."
That said, since it appears the 2700 may not be seeing a resurgence of supply and that at least some of the Ryzen 2 chips can possibly be de-tuned to the same power consumption of the 2700 (max 65W) then it would be better if this thread could focus on those questions, or I can start a new thread asking that question.