AMD Ryzen 3rd Gen 'Matisse' Coming Mid 2019: Eight Core Zen 2 with PCIe 4.0 on Desktop
by Ian Cutress on January 9, 2019 1:01 PM ESTBlink and you miss it: AMD's keynote address this year was a whirlwind of primetime announcements for the company. The message is clear: AMD is committing itself to 7nm as the future process node that will drive the company's innovations starting in 2019. The first consumer products on 7nm will be the Ryzen 3rd Generation Desktop processors, using Zen 2 cores, offering more than competitive performance against Intel's best hardware. Also on the docket is a return to high-end graphics performance, with AMD set to release a 7nm graphics card that can spar blow-for-blow with the competition at the $700 price barrier.
AMD at CES 2019
One of the odd things about AMD’s announcements this show has been the tale of two halves. Normally a company will push out single major press release with everything in it. This year AMD discussed its news around Ryzen-3000 series mobile parts and AMD Chromebooks just as the show started, and we were all confused if this was going to constitute what was in the keynote or not – it would seem odd, after all, for the company to pre-announce its keynote announcements. Luckily, AMD has plenty to announce, and it’s all pretty juicy.
First up, CPUs. AMD presented its next generation 7nm desktop CPU, which is the 3rd Generation Ryzen.
Attacking the Mainstream CPU Market: Toe to Toe with Core i9-9900K
Ignore everything you might have heard about what AMD’s future desktop CPU is going to be. Here are most of the details you need to know.
The new parts, codenamed Matisse, will be coming to market in mid-2019 (sometime in Q2 or Q3). The processor the company had on display was made from two pieces of silicon on the package: one eight-core 7nm chiplet made at TSMC, and a 14nm input/output chiplet with the dual memory controllers and the PCIe lanes, made at GlobalFoundries.
The company did state that it is the world’s first 7nm gaming CPU, and will also be the world’s first mainstream CPU to support PCIe 4.0 x16. At this time the company is not commenting on if the 3rd Gen is going to have a maximum of eight cores, or if this represents the best processor of the whole family.
Because the processor is still far away from launch, frequencies are not being finalized yet. However, the processor is for the AM4 socket, given that AMD has previously said that it intends to keep backwards compatibility for several generations. That will mean that this CPU will work in current 300 and 400-series AMD motherboards.
What this means for PCIe 4.0 is actually fairly simple. We expect there to be a new line of motherboards presumably something like X570 that will be PCIe 4.0 compatible, for any new PCIe 4.0 graphics cards that will be coming to market. One of the differences with PCIe 4.0 is that it can only handle PCB traces up to 7 inches before needing a redriver/retimer, so these extra ICs are needed for ports lower down the board. But, the first PCIe slot on most motherboards is in that limit, so it would appear that a lot of current 300 and 400 series motherboards, assuming the traces adhere to signal integrity specifications, could have their first PCIe slot rated at PCIe 4.0 with new firmware.
Going For Die Size
As we can see on the die shot above, the 8-core chiplet is smaller than the IO-die, similar to the 8+1 chiplet design on EPYC. The IO-die is not exactly one quarter of the EPYC IO-die, as I predicted might be the case back the Rome server processor announcement launch, but it is actually somewhere between one quarter and one half.
Doing some measurements on our imagery of the processor, and knowing that an AM4 processor is 40mm square, we measure the chiplet to be 10.53 x 7.67 mm = 80.80 mm2, whereas the IO die is 13.16mm x 9.32 mm = 122.63 mm2.
+15% Performance Generation on Generation, Minimum.
During the keynote, AMD showed some performance numbers using the new Ryzen 3rd Generation (Matisse) processor. The test in question was Cinebench R15.
Our internal numbers show the 2nd Generation Ryzen 7 2700X scores 1754.
This new 3rd Generation Ryzen processor scored 2023.
This would mean that at current non-final clocks, the new parts give a 15.3% increase in performance generation on generation. Cinebench is an idealized situation for AMD, but this is not at final clocks either. It will depend on the workload, but this is an interesting data point to have.
Identical Performance to the Core i9-9900K, Minimum.
Our internal benchmarks show the 9900K with a score of 2032.
The 8-core AMD processor scored 2023, and the Intel Core i9-9900K scored 2042.
Both systems were running on strong air cooling, and we were told that the Core i9-9900K was allowed to run at its standard frequencies on an ASUS motherboard. The AMD chip, by contrast, was not running at final clocks. AMD said that both systems had identical power supplies, DRAM, SSDs, operating systems, patches, and both with a Vega 64 graphics card.
At Just Over Half The Power…?!
Also, in that same test, it showed the system level power. This includes the motherboard, DRAM, SSD, and so on. As the systems were supposedly identical, this makes the comparison CPU only. The Intel system, during Cinebench, ran at 180W. This result is in line with what we’ve seen on our systems, and sounds correct. The AMD system on the other hand was running at 130-132W.
If we take a look at our average system idle power in our own reviews which is around 55W, this would make the Intel CPU around 125W, whereas the AMD CPU would be around 75W.
AMD Benchmarks at CES 2019 | ||||||
AnandTech | System Power | Idle Power* | Chip Power | CB 15 MT Score (pre-brief) |
CB 15 MT Score (on-stage) |
All-Core Frequency |
AMD Zen 2 | 130W | 55W | 75W | 2023 | 2057 | ? |
Intel i9-9900K | 180W | 55W | 125W | 2042 | 2040 | 4.7 GHz |
*A rough estimate given our previous review testing |
This suggests that AMD’s new processors with the same amount of cores are offering performance parity in select benchmarks to Intel’s highest performing mainstream processor, while consuming a lot less power. Almost half as much power.
That is a powerful statement. (ed: pun not intended)
How has AMD done this? IPC or Frequency?
We know a few things about the new Zen 2 microarchitecture. We know it has an improved branch predictor unit, and improved prefetcher, better micro-op cache management, a larger micro-op cache, increased dispatch bandwidth, increased retire bandwidth, native support for 256-bit floating point math, double size FMA units, and double size load-store units. These last three parts are key elements to an FP-heavy benchmark like Cinebench, and work a lot in AMD’s favor.
As the Intel CPU was allowed to run as standard, even on the ASUS board, it should reach around 4.7 GHz on an all-core turbo. AMD’s frequencies on the processor were unknown; but also they are not final and we ‘should expect more’. Well, if the processor was only running at 75W, and they can push it another 20-30W, then there’s going to be more frequency and more performance to be had.
The one thing we don’t know is how well TSMC’s 7nm performs with respect to voltage and frequency. The only chips that currently exist on the process are smartphone chips that are under 3 GHz. There is no comparable metric – one would assume that in order to be competitive with the Core i9-9900K, the processor would have to match the all-core frequency (4.7 GHz) if it was at the same IPC.
If the CPU can't match IPC or frequency, then three things are possible:
- If the TSMC process can’t go that high on frequency, then AMD is ahead of Intel on IPC, which is a massive change in the ranks of modern x86 hardware.
- If the TSMC process can clock above 5.0 GHz, AND there is room to spare in the power budget to go even higher, then it’s going to be really funny seeing these processors complete.
- AMD's Hyperthreading for software such as CineBench is out of this world.
TL;DR = AMD’s 3rd Gen Ryzen Processors Are Another Step Up
When speaking with AMD, their representative said that there will be more information to follow as we get closer to launch. They’re happy for users to discuss whether it is IPC or frequency that is making AMD the winner here, and they’ll disclose more closer to the time.
Ian, I Thought You Predicted Two Chiplets?
Naturally, I assumed that AMD would be presenting a Ryzen-3000 series desktop processor with sixteen cores. For me, and a lot of others, felt like a natural progression, but here we are today with AMD only mentioning an eight core chip.
My money on two chiplets and a quarter IO die
— Ian Cutress (@IanCutress) November 7, 2018
I predicted wrong, and I've lost my money (ed: in Las Vegas no less). But if we look at the processor, there’s still room for a surprise.
There’s room for a little something extra in there. There’s not much room for a little something extra, but I’m sure if AMD wanted to, there’s just enough space for another CPU chiplet (or a GPU chiplet) on this package. The question would then be around frequency and power, which are both valid.
There's also the question of lower core count processors and the cheaper end of the market. This processor uses silicon from TSMC, made in Taiwan, and GlobalFoundries, made in New York, then packaged together. We have heard some discussion from others not in the industry that this makes cheaper processors (sub $100) less feasible. It is entirely possible that AMD might address that market with future GPU.
What AMD has plans for in the future, I don’t know. I don’t have a crystal ball. But it does look like AMD has some room to grow in the future if they need to.
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deksman2 - Thursday, February 28, 2019 - link
Really?And the fact that AMD demo-ed a mid-range Zen 2 part CPU with 8 cores and 16 threads which slightly beat out the i9 9900K at half the power draw means nothing?
Or the fact that Zen 1 and Zen+ already closed a significant gap with Intel and that majority of industry developers code for Intel in the first place (and not AMD)?
AMD did good considering what kind of brute force approach they need to take to appear 'good' in people's eyes'.
Once the industry is optimizing more for AMD products in general, the landscape will probably change even more.
mito0815 - Thursday, January 24, 2019 - link
Looks good so far. A few months of actual AMD x86 end user/server space performance crown might shake Intel up a bit more than already the case.Bill The Cat - Thursday, January 31, 2019 - link
I've been doing good with a 6/12 core/thread first gen Ryzen but what the hey, I want at least 8/16 and for my other computer I want 64/128.And hold on, who told everyone about my Saturn V addon.. Who told? It was going to be my best computer ever that would plaster me into the moon at 186K miles per decade.. LOL... Gotta have cores and more cores... But really, 8/16 should last a long time.
Heilwiga - Friday, March 1, 2019 - link
The Specs are just amazing. I love the new <a href="https://www.linkedin.com/company/seo-company-in-gr... Ryzen. AMD is doing fine work!Dragonstongue - Sunday, May 26, 2019 - link
People seemingly complete discount/dismiss the impact that transitioning from Bulldozer through to First gen Ryzen/ThreadRipper/EPYC had to the global tech industry, it shot a "smart shot"AMD could not compete on speed, raw performance etc etc etc, what they could however compete on is loading a single chip with numerous cores and/or split up a motherboard in it's entirety to slap upon a single processor (AMD was the first to a true dual core etc etc etc)
Point is, Intel was far too dedicated to optimizing power use (when not in turbo or overclocking it in any way) as well as performance everywhere they could though slapping more cores as well as more threads was not as interesting in getting something to run mach 20 and sip power while doing so (how many years did they mange to do exactly that)
problems of course become magnitudes more difficult the more crap you cram under that tiny little hood, so I suppose making a single wicked core "makes sense" a single anything no matter how large cannot compete vs many many little guys running a bit slower (reducing heat, power, complexity, wafer yields, keep all features available to every chip you put out for that generation etc)
GPU sped things up, then did FPGA, then did ASIC (which GPU "use" to be a completed "board")
anyways....long and short of it..AMD expertise in shrinking things, reverse engineering and the like allowed them to slam a load more everything into the same space, Ryzen 1 was a massive success, it hurt Intel and Nvidia and everyone else in their own fashion,
Ryzen+(12nm) just sped it up and optimized some of the key features ( XFR and Precision boost version 2 etc) made them smack the living crud out of intel, that is a fact, intel is already hurting dearly from their own "bad cake" sort of speak, AMD is just piling the hurt on.
AMD is doing targeted strikes against the weakness in the INDUSTRY not the individuals, I personally believe that, we need MORE to propel the way forward, more for less of a higher quality and reliability/support network backing it.
Ryzen 3 was/is truly the "right place at the right time" unless all of them are buddy buddy and allowing AMD massive "industry wins" ($$$$$$$$$$ sales therefore market and mindshare which are priceless)
Splitting up the I/O from the core, genius, are they the first, no, did they do it the best way thus far, oh hell yeh....my phones CPU/GPU while crazy fast for a phone simply does not stand a chance in the level of "smart" (clock speeds alone, slowest my phones cpu is "allowed" is
1.6Ghz x 4 cores (locked speed) 2.35Ghz on 4 cores (locked)
where even second gen Phenom II are able to drop their clocks to as low as 400Mhz while still being able to autooverclock in excess of 4.3Ghz on up to 6 cores 6 threads.
anyways... AMD seen what the industry needed and has been doing what they could "to be a business" but more than that, in my honest to god opinion, I see Dr Lisa as one of those "rare folks" that see the path that needs to be taken before all should fail, where all the others sit back and are more or less ok to play the same old pissing match.
I suppose 20+ years all the ups and downs with economy is not enough warning for folks, last 3 years has been $%^&$%^ brutal for the tech world, more or less except for AMD that has hit all its targets between the eyes (the only way to take down a bull)
More of everything for less, this way here "simple things" that me and you might like to do, like ripping multiple tracks and such at same time has become (with AMD) much more easy to have, now we are talking 8 core 16 thread at less overall power use than the average single core was many decades prior (125w vs say 45w, ok the new one uses more, but, it can crunch metadata at magnitudes more effective rate as well the old chip was always at its max power use (more or less) the modern ones sip power to max performance back and forth constantly.
That is my story and I am sticking to it, Ryzen to change the world.
Dragonstongue - Sunday, May 26, 2019 - link
I'm 4 Ryzen ......hmmmm AM4 Ryzen...say it twisted tongue or fast.... how unusual is that coinky-dink