TheLostSwede
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The base clock is 300MHz higher, VS the 3700X.
The thing is, with the design of Ryzen 3000, it seems no chip really runs at that base clock, as all the Ryzen 7 and Ryzen 9 parts at least, seem to hover around 4.0-4.2GHz, regardless of what you're running. It doesn't matter if you load one core, or all cores, as you showed above.
So even a higher base clock, seems to have no impact on the average clock speeds of the chips.
The thing is that this is really no different than the first gen Ryzen chips. The 1700 was a 65W TDP and the 1800X was a 95W TDP. Even though the 1800x was faster as base OC the 1700 to 3.9 would put it near to the 1800x which had a maximum 4.1 GHZ OC based on what I have seen.
Well, the 1700 had worse silicon than the 1700X and 1800X, as it simply wouldn't clock as high. Again, it was 100-200MHz difference, but it was a very hard ceiling at 3.9GHz for the 1700, whereas the X parts could hit 4.0-4.1GHz.
The situation is seemingly reversed now, with the 3700X hitting the same speeds as the 3800X, which is just plain odd imho, or the first batch of 3700X chips are actually 3800X parts or something along that line...