Tuesday, March 28th 2023

AMD Ryzen 7 7800X3D Surfaces on SANDRA Database

AMD's hotly anticipated gaming CPU, the Ryzen 7 7800X3D "Zen 4," which launches early-April, is beginning to show up in online benchmark databases. The 8-core/16-thread processor has 64 MB of 3D Vertical Cache, which takes its L3 cache size up to an impressive 96 MB, and total cache up to 104 MB. The chip is showing up on the SiSoftware SANDRA online database, where it was tested on an MSI MEG X670E Ace motherboard. It obtained a score of 395.07 GOPS, with 527.56 GIPS dhrystone INT, 552.04 GIPS dhrystone long; 316 GFLOP/s whetstone single-precision floating point, and 264.71 GFLOP/s whetstone double-precision floating point.

The score puts it at roughly 37% faster than the Ryzen 7 5800X3D "Zen 3," although it's somewhere between its other 8-core "Zen 4" compatriots, the 7700X and 7700. The 7800X3D, much like its predecessor, is expected to perform either on-par or slightly worse than the 7700X in frequency/IPC dependent "lightweight" tasks, but zoom past in cache-favoring workloads such as gaming. Its predecessor, the 5800X3D, beat the fastest Intel processor of its time, the i9-12900K, so the 7800X3D has its task cut out—to beat the i9-13900K in gaming.
Sources: momomo_us (Twitter), Tom's Hardware, VideoCardz, SiSoftware SANDRA database
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34 Comments on AMD Ryzen 7 7800X3D Surfaces on SANDRA Database

#26
Colddecked
TomorrowHardly. They use different sockets and memory. 5800X3D was endgame gaming for AM4 and still sells like hotcakes even at 300+ prices.
I own a 5800x3d, got it late last year so yeah I wasn't being serious.
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#27
Tomorrow
ColddeckedI own a 5800x3d, got it late last year so yeah I wasn't being serious.
I got mine a few months after launch last year. And finally got BIOS level curve optimizer support last month. Something it should have launched with from the get go.
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#28
Colddecked
TomorrowI got mine a few months after launch last year. And finally got BIOS level curve optimizer support last month. Something it should have launched with from the get go.
Its a wonderful CPU. Never knew Warzone could be so smooth.
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#29
neblogai
Don't agree with people thinking 8000 series is going to be just some type of Zen4. Pretty sure it will be Zen5, as it aligns with AMD launch cadence. Which, for Zen5, is likely to be very late 2023 (if everything goes perfectly), or early 2024. And still, it will most likely be beaten in games by Zen4 3D, so no reason to delay the purchase, unless you want to wait even longer for 3D-cached Zen5.
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#30
Daven
neblogaiDon't agree with people thinking 8000 series is going to be just some type of Zen4. Pretty sure it will be Zen5, as it aligns with AMD launch cadence. Which, for Zen5, is likely to be very late 2023 (if everything goes perfectly), or early 2024. And still, it will most likely be beaten in games by Zen4 3D, so no reason to delay the purchase, unless you want to wait even longer for 3D-cached Zen5.
AMDs desktop CPU launch cadence is every two years. That would put Zen 5 at the end of 2024 if they continue to follow it. Only ‘+’ versions are sometimes released in off years.
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#31
trsttte
Space Lynxryzen 8000 will still be zen 4 regardless of when it comes out.
TomorrowAPU's and/or XT refresh based on 4nm Zen 4.
Zen 5 is 2024 product.
Or maybe zen4+ like Pinacle Ridge (Ryzen 2000)
freeagentAMD releases a new flagship every 6 months lol.. I’m out.. back to blue.
kwolf667I was going to buy the 7800x3d but I now feel that would make me the victim of AMD marketing strategy, which consists in hyperdifferentiation of their products so that they can dangle another carrot in front of you every 6 months. Generational cycles used to be longer or at least they weren't as differentiated into 6 or more different product launches. I may also just go with Intel Gen 14 now, provided they become more energy efficient.
That doesn't make any sense, so you prefer a probably worse CPU because the company will take longer to launch something better? Meh, you do you.
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#32
neblogai
DavenAMDs desktop CPU launch cadence is every two years. That would put Zen 5 at the end of 2024 if they continue to follow it. Only ‘+’ versions are sometimes released in off years.
Zen2 to Zen3 took 16 months, and I expect the same for Zen4 to Zen5. I think they will try using the fast aproach of keeping the I/O die, and only changing the compute chiplet, for every two generations of CPU (and maybe GPUs too). So, last time it took them 16 months to bring Zen3 (B0 silicon too) to market, and 16 months from Zen4 launch is Jan2024. This time it may be even faster if they manage to luck out with good A0 for 2023 launch, or early 2024 if things go less than perfect.
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#33
darrenj
I run a 5800X3D at the moment
I don't do numbers and graphs but as a pure gamer moving from a 5800X with everything else being the same; RTX 4080, DDR4 3600 memory, motherboard, NVME SSD drives, and ancillaries to a 5800X3D, the improvement was more than noticeable!
I have been an AMD fanboy for the last 3 years and my next build would always have been an AMD 7000, the 7800X3D is just perfectly timed for my upgrade window
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#34
Dia01
darrenjAnd here I am with a new Asus AM5 motherboard and DDR5 6000 ram all in the unopened shipping box biting my nails for 7800X3D!!
Bahhhaa, me also ^^
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