The Latest AMD Ryzen 5 Boasts Super Powerful Performance!

It seems that Zen 5 CPUs have already appeared out there, and a new AMD Ryzen 5 9600X sample has reportedly been tested in several benchmarks, including CPU-Z and AIDA64. The results are quite surprising because this latest AMD Ryzen 5 offers remarkable performance.

This new CPU is scheduled to be released in July 2024, with AMD Ryzen 9000 X3D CPUs reportedly coming a few months later, and the writer expects them to make a big splash in the gaming CPU segment. In this case, a six-core Granite Ridge AMD Ryzen CPU is shown in comparison to a Ryzen 5 7600X, demonstrating nearly double the cache performance.

Screenshots are provided by a regular technology leaker, HXL, who posted some screenshots of the new CPU, claimed to be a Ryzen 5 9600X, reportedly running CPU-Z and AIDA64 on X (formerly Twitter). CPU-Z detects this chip as having six cores and 12 threads, with a clock speed of 5GHz (5,037MHz). In comparison, the Ryzen 5 7600X boosts up to 5.3GHz, but it’s worth noting that this new chip is just an engineering sample, and the final CPU may well boost higher when released.

Newest AMD Ryzen 5 Performance

Amd ryzen 5
The Latest AMD Ryzen 5 Boasts Super Powerful Performance! 5

What’s truly intriguing about those screenshots is the AIDA64 benchmark result, which indicates a significant increase in read and write performance in both level 1 (L1) and level 2 (L2) caches. These caches are small amounts of extremely high-speed memory located very close to the CPU cores, and faster cache translates to faster performance. With this new chip, the L1 cache reads at 3,756.4GB/s and writes at 1,884.4GB/s, compared to just 2,029.6GB/s and 1,026.9GB/s on the 7600X chip.

Meanwhile, the L2 cache on the 9600X chip reads and writes at 1,874.3GB/s and 1,795.1GB/s, respectively, as opposed to 1,028.5GB/s and 1,017GB/s on the 7600X chip. Though it doesn’t quite reach the double bandwidth promised by AMD at the Zen 5 event at Computex, these results are still quite impressive. CPU-Z also reveals the cache amounts on this new chip, with a total L1 cache of 384KB, total L2 cache of 6MB (1MB per core), and a shared L3 cache pool of 32MB.

Meanwhile, the internal CPU-Z benchmark shows that the Ryzen 5 9600X scored a multi-threaded score of 6,201.3 and a single-threaded score of 775.9. These results are slightly higher than the 5,944 and 746 figures typically seen on the Ryzen 5 7600X. However, it’s important to note that the mentioned 9600X is an engineering sample, so there could likely be a larger difference in performance when the final chip is released.

As is customary with rumor stories, there has been no official confirmation from AMD regarding the information above (and the image above is merely a mockup, not an actual photo), so refrain from taking it as absolute truth. AMD first officially introduced its new Zen 5 CPUs at the Computex trade show, and you can read all about what we witnessed on the show floor in our Computex news.

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Imadudin Adam
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