Extended Warranty + 1 Year €13.36 |
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AMD has given us a year to enjoy its new Ryzen processors, and now Amd is serving us its second generation. With the name Pinnacle Ridge, AMD Ryzen 5 2600 and 2600X and the AMD Ryzen 7 2700 and 2700X have six cores. What improvements have been made since the first generation? And how are they competing with Intel? Read more in our AMD Pinnacle Ridge review.
AMD Ryzen 5 vs. Intel Kaby Lake. Which processors are better? And does Intel finally have a strong competitor? We tested in benchmarks and with games such as The Witcher 3, Battlefield 1, Crysis 3, The Division and more.
AMD is finally introducing its highly anticipated Ryzen 2000 processor range, codenamed Pinnacle Ridge. Among the expected improvements is the higher clock speed, as well as the official support of the DDR4 system memory type clocked at 2933MHz. The new AMD Ryzen 5 2600 octa-core processor is clocked at speeds reaching 3.9GHz and its performance is suitable for the most demanding users.
AMD took over the Zen core last year, and the company has succeeded in moving to a more economical 12nm manufacturing process that allowed AMD to dramatically increase the processor clock speeds. This notable change is expected to increase the performance by a solid 15% compared to the Ryzen 1000 generation. This is an excellent result, considering it took place within a single processor generation.
For all its new CPUs, AMD has decided to bet on the improved Precision Boost 2 function. It essentially provides a flexible increase of the processor clock speed and a gradual decrease when the processor reaches its maximum acceptable temperature. This means the processor can maintain higher clock speeds for longer even when multiple cores come under heavy load simultaneously.
The new AMD Pinnacle Ridge processor range is firmly bound to the AM4 socket, not unlike the first generation of Ryzen processors. What this means for you is that aside from the processor itself, you also need a new motherboard and possibly DDR4 system memory with a maximum clock speed of 2933MHz. However, this hefty investment will pay off in the form of integrating a whole range of modern technologies into your PC. To name a few, you can get USB 3.1 (USB-C), PCIe 3.0, NVMe, 32Gb/sec M.2 slots, or SATA Express.
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