Wednesday, August 3rd 2022

Possible AMD Ryzen 7000 Launch Timeline Surfaces: Late-Aug Launch, Mid-Sep Availability
With AMD making it clear in investor-communications that its next-generation Ryzen 7000 "Zen 4" desktop processors will launch before October 2022; the countdown to their launch started. Wccftech got hold of a possible set of key dates. Apparently, August 28 is the big date on which AMD will formally announce its Ryzen 7000 Socket AM5 desktop processor lineup.
Following the August 28 announcement, the review NDA—the date on which you can read the first reviews of the retail products—is reportedly set at September 13. Market availability follows two days later, starting September 15. This is when you can actually buy the processor and compatible motherboards off the shelves. There's no word on a pre-order date; but it's always advisable to catch reviews before committing to purchase something that ships before launch date. These dates align with a mid-June leak of the launch date by AMD in a retailer promotion meeting held in China.The specific times attached with these dates are as follows (as reported by Wccftech):
Launch of Ryzen 7000 processors will go hand in hand with that of the first Socket AM5 motherboards. There are at least three known chipset models—X670E, X670, and B650. It's unclear if all three chipset models will be available in September.
Source:
Wccftech
Following the August 28 announcement, the review NDA—the date on which you can read the first reviews of the retail products—is reportedly set at September 13. Market availability follows two days later, starting September 15. This is when you can actually buy the processor and compatible motherboards off the shelves. There's no word on a pre-order date; but it's always advisable to catch reviews before committing to purchase something that ships before launch date. These dates align with a mid-June leak of the launch date by AMD in a retailer promotion meeting held in China.The specific times attached with these dates are as follows (as reported by Wccftech):
- Product announcement: August 29, 2022 at 8:00PM ET / August 30, 2022 at 2:00AM CET / 8:00AM TW
- Press embargo: September 13, 2022 at 9AM ET / 3PM CET / 9PM TW
- Sales embargo: September 15, 2022 at 9AM ET / 3PM CET / 9PM TW
Launch of Ryzen 7000 processors will go hand in hand with that of the first Socket AM5 motherboards. There are at least three known chipset models—X670E, X670, and B650. It's unclear if all three chipset models will be available in September.
53 Comments on Possible AMD Ryzen 7000 Launch Timeline Surfaces: Late-Aug Launch, Mid-Sep Availability
I wish for more competition, but it doesn't look good for Intel...
6500XT is still gimped by PCI-E Gen 4 x4, if you but it with Gen 3 board you're running into x4 bottleneck and if you've got Gen 4 board what are you doing buying a 6500XT? It matches 1060 6G in performance, a GPU from 2016.
You can buy Corsair AIO anywhere, reviewers receive samples on release day. SR36 can be bought in Taiwan or from Amazon and it's been out for at least 2 years. You don't need propaganda, you need market reach and a good marketing team. If there's no interest there's no reviews. GN can review some random cooler from Aliexpress simply because enough people ask them to test it. So how come this magic InWin AIO is shunned upon by everyone?
Yes perceived, but with a steady clock of 2985 MHZ you are also seeing one of the fastest GPU clocks available. That 450 Watt PSU is great as all you need is a 6 pin. Does the 1060 6G support HDMI 2.1? From 2016 is the same thing you could say about the 3050. One can easily get a B550 board for a reasonable about of money if that is such a pain in the butt. You see I have tried the 6500XT with Gen 3 (5600G) and Gen 4 (5600) and though the 5600 gives about 30 more FPS in most scenarios I was already over 100 FPS @1080P in most Games.
The Inwin SR36 is something I mentioned because of when it was released (At the height of the lockdown) as a result I do not believe that review samples were sent out to the channels. The funny thing is there are reviews of it's successor. Having said that it has a huge heat-spreader and 2 pumps, but is also one of the easiest installs with the pump and fans all connected to the CPU header to control the speed but a SATA connector to not worry about power.
The other thing I really want to see is how these perform in gaming vs the 5800X3D.