Question Zen 6 Speculation Thread

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MoistOintment

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Jul 31, 2024
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It makes sense why AMD is moving to 12 core CCDs in server, and thus desktop also becomes 12 core CCDs as a byproduct. They didn't need a core count increase in client.

But now that 11950X (or whatever it's called) will be 24 cores, 485K (or whatever it's called) would lose bad in high nT productivity. The only response Intel could possibly have is either accept nT productivity defeat by a wide margin, or add a second compute tile and bring core count up to 48 cores.

Yes, these very high core count CPUs today are a bit gimmicky and there's a small niche that would truly benefit. And Yes, given the choice, I think the vast majority would prefer big ST improvements. But if ST improvements are slowing, then it makes sense to push core counts.

The point is that the halo effect of having "the best" CPU has a big impact on down stream sales. Even amongst the "enthusiast" community. And those enthusiasts act as "tech advisors" to non-techy friends and family.

There's a big downstream benefit to having the "best" client CPU at gaming and productivity, even it itself doesn't contribute a lot financially.
 

gdansk

Diamond Member
Feb 8, 2011
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That is harmful generalization. It all depends on what you are doing.
Yeah, but we're talking about chips that are going to have a measly meager paltry 24 cores. The amount of people who need more but don't want more memory bandwidth is small. Perhaps almost the entire market is reading this thread conjuring imaginary workloads where 12 Z6 CCD + 32 Z6c CCD would be a good configuration.
 

Hulk

Diamond Member
Oct 9, 1999
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It makes sense why AMD is moving to 12 core CCDs in server, and thus desktop also becomes 12 core CCDs as a byproduct. They didn't need a core count increase in client.

But now that 11950X (or whatever it's called) will be 24 cores, 485K (or whatever it's called) would lose bad in high nT productivity. The only response Intel could possibly have is either accept nT productivity defeat by a wide margin, or add a second compute tile and bring core count up to 48 cores.

Yes, these very high core count CPUs today are a bit gimmicky and there's a small niche that would truly benefit. And Yes, given the choice, I think the vast majority would prefer big ST improvements. But if ST improvements are slowing, then it makes sense to push core counts.

The point is that the halo effect of having "the best" CPU has a big impact on down stream sales. Even amongst the "enthusiast" community. And those enthusiasts act as "tech advisors" to non-techy friends and family.

There's a big downstream benefit to having the "best" client CPU at gaming and productivity, even it itself doesn't contribute a lot financially.

The problem the "winner" of the MT wars is going to have is finding benchmarks/applications that will actually sell people on the need for such high core counts.
Beyond 24/48 I don't think many apps are going to show improvements.

Games? No.
Photoshop? No.
Video encoding? Not really, perhaps just a bit with some formats.
Business? No, sorry.
Web Browsing? Haha.
Cinebench and similar? Yes. But this isn't what "the people" are generally interested in for actual work.

So, assuming plenty of cores for each, it's gonna be the IPC and clocks those first handful of cores can reach to determine the better CPU.
 
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Josh128

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Oct 14, 2022
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Yeah, but we're talking about chips that are going to have a measly meager paltry 24 cores. The amount of people who need more but don't want more memory bandwidth is small. Perhaps almost the entire market is reading this thread conjuring imaginary workloads where 12 Z6 CCD + 32 Z6c CCD would be a good configuration.
Dont forget, add X3D to both of those CCDs. Would be even better.

Yes.gif
 

Hulk

Diamond Member
Oct 9, 1999
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This is what chatgpt (which if of course never wrong) says about frequency if the transistors could operate at light speed.

Scale / DistanceFrequency (Hz)In GHzOrder-of-magnitude
5 nm gate6 × 10¹⁶ Hz6 × 10⁷ GHz≈ 60 million GHz
100 nm interconnect3 × 10¹⁵ Hz3 × 10⁶ GHz≈ 3 million GHz
1 µm block3 × 10¹⁴ Hz3 × 10⁵ GHz≈ 300 thousand GHz
1 cm chip3 × 10¹⁰ Hz30 GHz≈ 30 GHz
 

511

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Jul 12, 2024
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This is what chatgpt (which if of course never wrong) says about frequency if the transistors could operate at light speed.

Scale / DistanceFrequency (Hz)In GHzOrder-of-magnitude
5 nm gate6 × 10¹⁶ Hz6 × 10⁷ GHz≈ 60 million GHz
100 nm interconnect3 × 10¹⁵ Hz3 × 10⁶ GHz≈ 3 million GHz
1 µm block3 × 10¹⁴ Hz3 × 10⁵ GHz≈ 300 thousand GHz
1 cm chip3 × 10¹⁰ Hz30 GHz≈ 30 GHz
ChatGPT yeah totally wrong
 

Josh128

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Oct 14, 2022
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Okay prediction time.

Based on my rig running CB R23 (more fun to run/watch than R24) as the baseline for Zen 6 predictions....
This is how I've been running (and I hit it hard) for the past year with absolutely no issues and perfect stability.
For the record, I think it's nearly impossible for Raptor Lake to attain this score without a custom loop and be reliable.
That's why after 30+ years of Intel I moved to AMD.
Anyway...

9950X
4.87GHz CCD1, 4.55 CCD2 - Average clockspeed = 4.71GHz
200W
Package Power
75 C on 280 AIO
1.09V
CB R23 MT score 41,000

What will the clockspeed and CB R23 score be for the 24/48 Zen 6 CPU be at 200W?

If AMD does not set Zen 6 at 200W "out of the box" then what power will they use and what will the frequency and score for CBR23 be?

I'm curious for the 6 to 7GHz people out there how many will be claiming over 6GHz in this actual real world example for Zen 6? Even if you shut down 8 cores and made it apples-to-apples what do you think for frequency and score?
~45% power savings per core at same freq vs N4P. You have 50% more cores, so you would end up around 235MHz less nT clockspeed in this workload at the same 200W PPT. At the same time, lets say you gain 5% IPC in Cinebench R23. The results are:

For 24 core--
@200W :
41K*1.5 = 61,500 R23 nT
4.47 GHz average nT clockspeeds

@230W
67,000 R23 nT
4.9GHz average clockspeeds

4.47 GHz leaves a TON of room for more perf if you up the power, which is why I say they will-- they will pin that baby to whatever the socket can safely provide, at least 230W, maybe >250W.
 
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StefanR5R

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Dec 10, 2016
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I'm curious for the 6 to 7GHz people out there how many will be claiming over 6GHz in this actual real world example [CB23 MT] for Zen 6?
Originally, when the 6 GHz < f < 7 GHz discussion started,
  • f was f_max, and
  • "as close to 7 GHz as [super]humanly possible" was pictured as a development stretch goal given to AMD's [super]human engineers by their superiors.
Subsequently, various people here and at worse educated places throughout the 'net grossly mistook the f for average clocks under high CPU utilization. Furthermore, there were some who misrepresented the claims concerning those 7 GHz as claims that 7 GHz will be the f_max — and after having misrepresented the claims, could conveniently ridicule the claims.

PS, IIRC, CB23 is relatively light on memory accesses (lighter than CB24 which still isn't particularly heavy on mem access), therefore CB23 represents only a niche within the real world of parallel computing.
 
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Kaffeekenan

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Jan 6, 2022
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StefanR5R

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Dec 10, 2016
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No, launch order or launch dates cannot be derived from this information. Client CPU products can (and I presume will) launch with classic AGESA. Maybe openSIL never even gets to client AM5 platforms [edit: and laptop BGA sockets] and is merely adopted in server AM5 platforms [edit: or/and embedded platforms] besides SP7/SP8.
 
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Saylick

Diamond Member
Sep 10, 2012
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Okay prediction time.

Based on my rig running CB R23 (more fun to run/watch than R24) as the baseline for Zen 6 predictions....
This is how I've been running (and I hit it hard) for the past year with absolutely no issues and perfect stability.
For the record, I think it's nearly impossible for Raptor Lake to attain this score without a custom loop and be reliable.
That's why after 30+ years of Intel I moved to AMD.
Anyway...

9950X
4.87GHz CCD1, 4.55 CCD2 - Average clockspeed = 4.71GHz
200W
Package Power
75 C on 280 AIO
1.09V
CB R23 MT score 41,000

What will the clockspeed and CB R23 score be for the 24/48 Zen 6 CPU be at 200W?

If AMD does not set Zen 6 at 200W "out of the box" then what power will they use and what will the frequency and score for CBR23 be?

I'm curious for the 6 to 7GHz people out there how many will be claiming over 6GHz in this actual real world example for Zen 6? Even if you shut down 8 cores and made it apples-to-apples what do you think for frequency and score?
Sure I'll throw my hat into the ring.

200W, 16 core Zen 6, CB R23 MT, average clocks of ~5.5 GHz.
 

gdansk

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Feb 8, 2011
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Nobody is forcing you to buy 48c part if you can do everything you want with 8c machine.
Oh, I forgot to reply to this part too. We already saw how it played out with AMD. If you want the best single compute tile part, you can't buy it. AMD won't make it. It's not a big deal - maybe 3-4% slower than it could be.

But I suspect Intel will do the same. If dual tile NVL didn't exist you can guarantee that their fastest, best bin chips would appear in a single tile configuration. The mere existence of a dual tile configuration gives Intel an option to hurt every other buyer down the stack in the name of product segmentation to push that ASP.
 

DrMrLordX

Lifer
Apr 27, 2000
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Many seem to assume that ARL is a "dud" and brush aside NVL.

Intel keeps recycling the same basic P-core design with minor tweaks. Until they trot out unified core, nobody seems to expect much of them.

Beyond 24/48 I don't think many apps are going to show improvements.
You could argue that 16c/32t is already at that point.
 

Josh128

Golden Member
Oct 14, 2022
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Oh, I forgot to reply to this part too. We already saw how it played out with AMD. If you want the best single compute tile part, you can't buy it. AMD won't make it. It's not a big deal - maybe 3-4% slower than it could be.
Well, if the 9850X3D rumor of 5.6GHz is true, you WILL be able to buy the best single compute tile part. Im just still skeptical its actually real.