AMD Zen 4 Could Offer up to 24% Better IPC Performance than Zen 3

Wow, that’s a massive 24% increase in IPC (instructions per cycle) performance over the Zen 3.

Taken from Videocardz … Just yesterday, we covered a leak suggesting that an engineering sample of Raphael desktop CPU with 8-core/16-threads is clocked at 5.2 GHz, which already represents a 10% increase over 8-core Ryzen 7 5800X. But the claims can go even higher, up to 14% according to the latest video from Moore’s Law is Dead.

The YouTuber also claims that the IPC (instructions per cycle) could increase by up to 24%. This means that Zen4 to Zen3 IPC gains would be even higher than Zen3 over Zen2 (it was officially 19% for fixed 4GHz 8-core CPU).

As a result of higher IPC and clocks, the single-thread performance would increase by 28 to 37% and so would multi-threaded, but no numbers are provided here.

AMD Zen4 MLID claims

  • 15-24% IPC Increase (Over Zen 3)
  • 8-14% Clock Increase (Over Zen 3)
  • 28-37% ST Perf Increase (Over Zen 3)
  • ST-Like or Higher MT Perf Increase (Over Zen 3)
  • 1 MB L2 / 4 MB L3 Per Core (vs 512 KB / 4 MB L3 per Zen 3 Core)
  • PCIe 5.0 Support (Increased Lanes)
  • DDR5/LPDDR5 Memory Support (DDR5-5200+)

Rumored AMD Zen4 launch schedule

An updated launch schedule for Ryzen 7000 and EPYC 7004 was also provided. But there appear to be no major changes to what was already expected. It does, however, show how many Zen4 products are to be expected in just a few months time.

  • EPYC Genoa 7004 (~Q4 2022) – A0 Silicon Taped-Out in March, B0 testing is ongoing
  • Ryzen 7000 ‘Raphael (~2H 2022) – Samples already running, production soon
  • Ryzen 7000 Dragon Range (~Q1 2023) – Sampling expected this year
  • Ryzen 7000 Phoenix (~Q1 2023) – Behind Genoa in testing
  • Threadripper 7000 Storm Peak (~1H 2023) – Planned

What is worth noting here is that MLID reiterates the rumors about 16-core Raphael mobile series, now officially codenamed “Dragon Range”. AMD did not confirm that those ‘enthusiast’ mobile series will in fact use the same desktop silicon, however thus far nothing would suggest otherwise.

Furthermore, Threadripper 7000 series codenamed ‘Storm Peak’ make a new appearance. This codename was first mentioned by Patrick Schur back in August last year, as next-gen Threadripper, but we have not heard this codename much ever since.

Source: Videocardz

 

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