Question Zen 6 Speculation Thread

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LightningZ71

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Mar 10, 2017
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Keep in mind, vanilla Zen 6 CCDs are an aggregate L3 cache upgrade over vanilla Zen5. That 50% L3 boost WILL show up in a few games that get benchmarked. Existing games won't suddenly need more cores, but they will appreciate having more local L3 to work out of. It won't make up the difference to the 3d cache parts, but it will help.
 
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Hulk

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From Zen 5 to Zen 6 the front and back ends were opened up significantly. I would be surprised if Zen 6 became any wider. But I do think there will be substantial changes to the structures the keep the decode units and exe ports occupied. Namely cache improvements, the ubiquitious branch prediction improvements, OoO scheduling, more registers and buffers,improved logic to better keep those decoders and ports filled...etc.

This architectural advancement schedule from AMD would make sense. If Zen 4 was a balanced design then improving on those internal structures without making the part wider wouldn't do much if the front and back end were already nearing capacity. But making Zen 5 getting wider would show benefit even without substantially upgrading the parts mentioned above. Zen 6 will "rebalance" Zen 5 and put all of that width to use I'm thinking.
 

Fjodor2001

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Feb 6, 2010
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That's not the point.
And >95% of desktop users will use the new CPUs only for gaming (and lesser tasks that benefit even less from more than 12C/24T).
No, it's exactly the point. It's 48T and you can use it for whatever you want. And both AMD and Intel think there'll be sufficient market for such SKUs to be released, otherwise it would not be in their lineup.

As for Intel, ALL their SKUs will be 16C or above except the bottom one in the NVL-S lineup. Clearly shows that more cores is the path forward from their point of view.
ntel is doing it because brute-force MT is their only chance to win any benchmarks.
AMD is doing it in part to counter Intel for marketing reasons, in part to make some extra pocket money from that small niche of people who do other stuff than gaming.

That doesn't change the fact that these will make up maybe 1% of volume and 2-3% of desktop revenue, if not less, and are irrelevant for gaming, which is THE main purpose of buying a faster CPU for every normal desktop PC buyer/upgrader.

In fact, I fully expect in this cycle more people will go for mono-CCD models, and less sales for dual-CCD models compared to previous gens, because mono-12C is a decent MT upgrade vs. 8C without the caveats of dual-CCDs.
I can absolutely see 7900X and 9900X owners, possibly even 7950X owners "downgrading" to the Ryzen 7 580X or whatever AMD will call the 12C mono-CCD vanilla model.
Both AMD and Intel will be going for 48T CPUs. They would not be doing so unless they think there will be sufficient market for it. As for your percentage numbers, it's absolutely ridiculous you have nothing to back it up, otherwise provide links.
 

Fjodor2001

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They would toss it out anyway, market or not. You gotta do something with leaky bins.
Waddaya mean leaky bins?

And regardless, they expect there to be sufficient number of people that want and buys the 48T SKUs, otherwise they would not release it. So there's a market for it.
where else would I stash leaky 12c 5%er bins?
You can call them whaddever you want. They think there's a market for 48T on DT.
 

adroc_thurston

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mmaenpaa

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Waddaya mean leaky bins?

And regardless, they expect there to be sufficient number of people that want and buys the 48T SKUs, otherwise they would not release it. So there's a market for it.

You can call them whaddever you want. They think there's a market for 48T on DT.
Higher quality chips that are binned generally have less leakage. Less leakage = less voltage. less voltage = lower heat = in Epyc it goes
 

Fjodor2001

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what it says on the box.
Says nothing about that on the box, otherwise clarify.
no. They just gotta stash leaky bins somewhere.
They are expecting there to be demand for 48T on DT and that they will be sold, otherwise they would not have them in the lineup.
They don't have to think.
DT is like a garbage dump for AMD.
Yeah for the CCDs with not all cores working. But those are not used on 48T SKUs.
 

adroc_thurston

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Timorous

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Says nothing about that on the box, otherwise clarify.

They are expecting there to be demand for 48T on DT and that they will be sold, otherwise they would not have them in the lineup.

Yeah for the CCDs with not all cores working. But those are not used on 48T SKUs.

Just because all the cores work does not mean they work at the voltages required to hit the TDP limits in server chips.

Those that do not hit the requirements go in desktop and the really bad ones can be the poor CCD in the dual CCD configs.
 

LightningZ71

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Barnacles!

Dies that go into EPYC processors must meet certain requirements for power consumption at certain target clocks. If they have otherwise functional CCDs that can't hit that spec, they are used for desktop products that have MUCH more relaxed requirements for power consumption at certain clocks instead focusing on peak achievable clocks at reasonable voltage levels.

As time goes on and overall yield metrics improve and as that generation's demands for EPYC CCDs are more readily met, better bins make it to the desktop. Sometimes, they make it into higher spec parts like the 5959XT, or the 9850X3D.

AMD can either throw CCDs away that don't meet EPYC requirements, or they can use an already developed platform to sell them under to recover cost of production. Current 12 and 16 core Ryzen parts make up a very small percentage of overall sales of each generation, and certainly not enough of a market to justify product development for fully bespoke parts, but is enough marginal sales to cover dev costs to sell below spec CCDs.