Monday, February 15th 2021
AMD Ryzen 7 PRO 5750G Engineering Sample Overclocked to 4.8 GHz & Benchmarked
We recently reported on the AMD Ryzen 7 PRO 5750G Zen 3 APU being discovered in China. The Ryzen 7 PRO 5750G engineering samples were distributed to system integrators and OEMs for validation with confidentiality clauses however it seems many have made their way elsewhere with several selling on eBay for 500 USD each. The Ryzen 7 5750G and Ryzen 7 PRO 5750G should be vertically identical in performance as the only differences are mainly software and support based.
The Ryzen 7 PRO 5750G was initially overclocked to 4.89 GHz at 1.5 V however this proved to be unstable so the chip was benchmarked at 4.8 GHz with 1.47 V which proved stable. The APU scored 660 points in the single-core CPU-Z benchmark and 6898 in the multi-core which places it firmly within range of the Ryzen 7 5800X at 663 and 6766 points respectively. Considering that this chip is only an engineering sample it is likely to offer similar performance at stock speeds when officially launched.
Sources:
Baidu (via @harukaze5719), eBay
The Ryzen 7 PRO 5750G was initially overclocked to 4.89 GHz at 1.5 V however this proved to be unstable so the chip was benchmarked at 4.8 GHz with 1.47 V which proved stable. The APU scored 660 points in the single-core CPU-Z benchmark and 6898 in the multi-core which places it firmly within range of the Ryzen 7 5800X at 663 and 6766 points respectively. Considering that this chip is only an engineering sample it is likely to offer similar performance at stock speeds when officially launched.
14 Comments on AMD Ryzen 7 PRO 5750G Engineering Sample Overclocked to 4.8 GHz & Benchmarked
would've been more interesting to see it's all-core overclocking capabilities at 1.2v
Maybe he/she is learning a bit? :roll:
Not sure how market-ready models are going to be boosted, but even with preliminary 4.45GHz all-core boost makes it not worth killing your CPU for a marginal performance increase.
anyone buying these or the sellers are open to severe law suits due to the nature of the
NDA's signed by the clients testing companies buyers lose out as the item can be confiscated by the police and courts as its deemed theft of copyright property as its not commercially or retail available.
Zen3 is fine.
Rocket lake is fine.
There are no real surprises at this point and nothing particularly interesting to look forward to until Zen4/DDR5 comes along.
you load up all cores to the max at 1.47v and you can kiss your zen3 cpu good-fucking-bye