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AMD Ryzen 5 2600

AMD Ryzen 5 2600 Review

| Published Date
10 - May - 2018
| Last Updated
25 - May - 2018
 
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AMD Ryzen 5 2600

    AMD Ryzen 5 2600 Price in India

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AMD Ryzen 5 2600 brings a host of improvements including the new Zen+ architecture, 12nm process and more for Rs.24,490

AMD Ryzen 5 2600 Rating 76100100

Our Verdict

AMD’s latest desktop flagship certainly has all the bells and whistles that they promised. For most folks who’ve been sceptical of moving to a new platform, a revision or an optimised iteration is what they’re looking out for. One which improves upon the drawbacks of the previous generation to provide a more streamlined performance across all use cases. Ryzen 7 2700X comes ahead of the Intel 8700K in all multi-threaded tasks but even with the improvements to the whole manufacturing process and the microarchitecture, single threaded performance isn’t exceeding that of Intel. But that’s not to say that it hasn’t improved, it certainly has managed to even the scales. The gaming performance of the new CPUs is just about at par with Intel CPUs so all gamers who held out on getting the Ryzen CPUs can certainly take the plunge now. The only issue right now is that the Indian prices don’t match the International pricing, so we don’t expect the same sales for the new Ryzen 7 2700X as the Intel Core i7-8700K. However, the 8700K does not ship with a cooler while the Ryzen 7 2700X does, so the pricing is justified. For everything else, they’re “practically” twins.

AMD Ryzen 5 2600: Detailed Review

AMD is back with a revision of their desktop CPUs and this time they’ve polished out most of the kinks and brought out a CPU that’s all set to set fire to the CPU battle yet again. Today’s launch is primarily focused on two new AMD Ryzen 7 CPUs and two new AMD Ryzen 5 CPUs. The new lineup is led by the AMD Ryzen 7 2700X which is still rocking 8 cores / 16 threads but thanks to a new process node, is more efficient and performant as well. The Ryzen 7 2700X is retailing at an SEP (Suggested Electronic Price) of Rs. 24,490 and we’ve seen Indian retailers selling it for Rs. 29,488 which is roughly Rs. 2,000 more than the Intel Core i7 8700K that it’s set to compete against. To figure out if the Ryzen 7 2700X does indeed do justice to the price tag, read on.

AMD RYZEN 7 2nd Gen CPU Lineup and Specifications

With today’s release, the overall lineup has grown to six SKUs with two of them being Ryzen APUs that were launched earlier this year and were powered by Vega compute units for the graphics processing. There is more disparity between the clock speeds of the SKUs than the previous release. If you look at the Ryzen 7 series, then there are two SKUs, the Ryzen 7 2700X and the Ryzen 7 2700. The former having a base clock of 3.7 GHz and the latter having a base clock of 3.2 GHz. That’s a 500 MHz difference for $30 as compared to the 1800X and the 1700X which differed by 200 MHz for $100. Another key difference between neighbouring SKUs is the TDP which in case of the Ryzen 7 CPUs is 40 W. That says a lot about the thermal headroom for the 2700X. 

AMD Ryzen 7 2700X Review Zen+ X470

As for the Ryzen 5 2600X and 2600, they’re pretty close in terms of specs and it’s quite logical since the Ryzen 3 and Ryzen 5 SKUs are positioned in a very price-competitive segment. Overall, if you look at the new SKU stack, AMD has come out with far fewer CPUs as compared to the first generation but with better disparity between them. In a way, this would help reduce the pricing across the SKU stack and that’s what they have done. 

The first gen Ryzen flagship i.e. the Ryzen 7 1800X had a launch price of $499 which was quite a lot but justified given the massive core count. Now that Intel has upped the core count on their CPUs, it’s more reasonable to price the Ryzen 7 2700X at the same price as the Intel Core i7-8700K. However, this being India, no retailer is going to stick to the suggested pricing and as a result we see the Ryzen 7 2700X selling for Rs. 29,488 which makes it expensive compared to the Intel Core i7-8700K.

What’s new with AMD Ryzen 2nd Gen CPUs - 12nm, X470 and Zen+

The first thing that stands out with the new lineup is that they’re built on the new 12nm process node from Global Foundries which they’re calling 12LP (Leading Performance). Aside from the new manufacturing process, AMD has also improved the CPU architecture for a more efficient and performant design and they are calling it “Zen+”. Primarily, they’ve improved the latency of the different cache memory levels which should go a long way towards improving performance in day-to-day productivity tasks and cache intensive tasks which play around with large data sets. 

Zen+

The overall improvement achieved with the new Zen+ is as follows:
L1 cache latency reduced by approximately 13%
L2 cache latency reduced by approximately 34%
L3 cache latency reduced by approximately 16%
DRAM latency reduced by approximately 11%
Single threaded IPC (Instructions Per Clock) improvement of approximately 3%
Support for DDR4-2933 (up from 2667)

12nm 

The improvement brought about by the new 12nm process is as follows:
10% better transistor performance
+300 MHz clock speed
50 mV reduction of core voltage
All-core overclocks in the vicinity of 4.2 GHz

The latency reduction and IPC improvement also help with one of the key domains where the first generation of Ryzen CPUs didn’t perform at par with Intel CPUs, gaming. Yes, AMD says that they’ve upped the ante this time with gaming performance and we’ll see that in action below.

X470 chipset

Yes, AMD did mention that they aren’t going to change the socket and they haven’t done so. However, given the improvements in the design as compared to the first-gen Ryzen CPUs, a newer chipset is warranted to make proper use of the new CPUs. You can still plug these CPUs in the older X370 motherboards without worry, however, you are going to miss out on these things:
Optimised for the power requirements of the new Ryzen 2nd Gen CPUs
Reduced TDP for the physical chipset 
Support for AMD StoreMI

One of these, is a new feature, i.e. the AMD StoreMI. It’s basically a software that AMD is shipping with all new X470 motherboards which allow users to combine different storage medium into one single virtual disk. So effectively, you can combine an SSD and an HDD together. And in doing so, you can move the frequently used data onto the faster storage medium. The fact that AMD is shipping a paid software for free is the good part, the great part is that it works with practically everything under the sun. You can combine any two devices, and that can be a SATA SSD, HDD, NVMe SSD, HDD, 3D XPoint SSD and even 2 GB of RAM. AMD states that their internal tests have shown an SSD+HDD under StoreMI to be of the same performance as just the SSD in itself. StoreMI throws up so many questions that we’re going to be bringing out an entirely different article on it in the coming days. 

Wraith Spire LED Cooler

When the Ryzen 7 1800X came out, it didn't ship with a cooler since it was a $500 CPU and it was expected that anyone opting for such an expensive CPU would invest in an aftermarket cooler. For most of the other SKUs, AMD shipped the Wraith coolers. This time around, AMD is including the Wraith Prism CPU cooler along with the Ryzen 7 2700X at no extra cost. Moreover, this thing has 3 controllable RGB zones and works well with most motherboard manufacturer's RGB lighting solutions.

For those wondering about the acoustic performance, the cooler is very silent. With an open test bench, the fan barely registered a 2.5 dB delta.

AMD RYZEN 7 2700X Performance

The AMD Ryzen 7 2700X has quite a few improvements over the previous generation and AMD sent us not one but two motherboards to push the new CPU to its limits. We tested the unit on the following configuration:

AMD RYZEN TEST RIG
CPU: AMD Ryzen 7 2700X
Motherboard: GIGABYTE X470 AORUS GAMING 7 WIFI / ASRock Taichi Ultimate / ASUS ROG STRIX X470-F Gaming
SSD: Samsung 860 EVO 250 GB
HDD: Seagate FireCuda 2 TB ST2000DX002
RAM: G.Skill SniperX F4-3400C16D-16GSXW
Cooler: Corsair H115i Pro / AMD Wraith Spire (LED)
PSU: Corsair HX1050

Cinebench

We begin with Cinebench and it's quite evident that the AMD Ryzen 7 2700X ploughs through in the multi-threaded run whereas it still lags behind the Intel Core i7-8700K in the single-threaded run. The same can be seen in Cinebench 11.5 as well. Compared to the first gen Ryzen 7 1800X, it's a significant improvement and has come quite close to the 8700K but never crossed that of the 8700K in our benchmarks.

AMD Ryzen 7 2700X Review Zen+ X470

AMD Ryzen 7 2700X Review Zen+ X470

AMD Ryzen 7 2700X Review Zen+ X470

AMD Ryzen 7 2700X Review Zen+ X470

POV-Ray

POV-Ray being a multi-threaded benchmark sees the Ryzen 7 2700X excel but it comes very close to the Intel Core i7-8700K. In our tests, the lead was just 2%.

AMD Ryzen 7 2700X Review Zen+ X470

Handbrake

Our Handbrake run basically consists of transcoding a 4K video clip from one CODEC to another without changing the resolution. Handbrake is quick to incorporate new CPU encoding engines and has the Intel CPU leading the group. The 2700X comes in as a close second.

AMD Ryzen 7 2700X Review Zen+ X470

Blender

Blender is a fairly well known open-source rendering software. In this benchmark, we're looking at the time taken for a run to finish rendering. So the lower the score in this test, better the CPU.

AMD Ryzen 7 2700X Review Zen+ X470

PCMark 10

We've stopped using PCMark 8 for our CPU tests with the advent of the newer PCMark 10 benchmark. These are not the default runs, we turn off OpenCL to ensure that the IGP/GPU doesn't affect the benchmark run.

AMD Ryzen 7 2700X Review Zen+ X470

Cache Latency

In AIDA64's cache tests we can see the claimed improvement in cache latency in the 2700X. 

AMD Ryzen 7 2700X Review Zen+ X470

7-Zip

In the compression and decompression benchmark within 7-Zip, the Ryzen 7 2700X can be seen with a significant lead. It appears that 7-Zip is more core-conscious as compared to the older WinRAR benchmark.

AMD Ryzen 7 2700X Review Zen+ X470

Gaming

And now for the part where the first gen Ryzen fell short of the Intel Kabylake CPUs. With the Ryzen 7 2700X, AMD has managed to close the gap considerably. Most games still perform better on the Coffee Lake quad-core Intel Core i5-8600K. Yes, the 8600K does better than the more superior 8700K in some of the older titles. The Ryzen 7 2700X seems to be very much at par with the 8700K, sometimes it's behind by just less than 5 FPS. 

AMD Ryzen 7 2700X Review Zen+ X470

Verdict

AMD’s latest desktop flagship certainly has all the bells and whistles that they promised. For most folks who’ve been sceptical of moving to a new platform, a revision or an optimised iteration is what they’re looking out for. One which improves upon the drawbacks of the previous generation to provide a more streamlined performance across all use cases. Ryzen 7 2700X comes ahead of the Intel 8700K in all multi-threaded tasks but even with the improvements to the whole manufacturing process and the microarchitecture, single threaded performance isn’t exceeding that of Intel. But that’s not to say that it hasn’t improved, it certainly has managed to even the scales. The gaming performance of the new CPUs is just about at par with Intel CPUs so all gamers who held out on getting the Ryzen CPUs can certainly take the plunge now. The only issue right now is that the Indian prices don’t match the International pricing, so we don’t expect the same sales for the new Ryzen 7 2700X as the Intel Core i7-8700K. For everything else, they’re “practically” twins.


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  AMD is back with a revision of their desktop CPUs and this time they've polished out most of the kinks and brought out a CPU that's all set to set fire to the CPU battle yet again. Today&r...

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