MÔ TẢ SẢN PHẨM Bộ vi xử lý - CPU AMD Ryzen Threadripper 1950X
Double trouble
When AMD unveiled its Zen architecture, which finally morphed into a product as Ryzen, much was said about Infinity Fabric, the company's new interconnect designed for maximum scalability. The 14nm FinFET Zen core is designed as a four-core-complex (CCX), with Infinity Fabric used to bind two CCX together to create the eight-core CPUs of Ryzen 7. What many didn't quite realise at the time is just how well Infinity Fabric would work (after a few teething troubles were resolved, at least) and just how far AMD could push it.
SPECS AT A GLANCE |
AMD THREADRIPPER 1950X |
AMD THREADRIPPER 1920X |
AMD THREADRIPPER 1900X |
AMD RYZEN 1800X |
ARCHITECTURE |
Zen |
Zen |
Zen |
Zen |
CORES/THREADS |
16/32 |
12/24 |
8/16 |
8/16 |
BASE CLOCK |
3.4GHz |
3.5GHz |
3.8GHz |
3.6GHz |
MAX BOOST CLOCK |
4.0GHz |
4.0GHz |
4.0GHz |
4.0GHz |
XFR BOOST |
200MHz |
200MHz |
200MHz |
100MHz |
L3 CACHE |
32MB |
32MB |
? |
16MB |
PROCESS |
14nm |
14nm |
14nm |
14nm |
TDP |
180W |
180W |
125W |
95W |
|
|
|
|
|

Threadripper 1950X is effectively two eight-core Ryzen 1800X CPUs placed onto the same package joined together by Infinity Fabric. The result is a CPU measuring a mammoth 72mm by 55mm, which slots into the even larger TR4 motherboard socket. Threadripper is, physically at least, the biggest consumer CPU released since the cartridge slot format of the Pentium 2—and even then the CPU itself was just a small part of the cartridge.