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- Apr 18, 2013
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- Artem S. Tashkinov
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Many have resorted to enabling Eco Mode in Ryzen Master which basically turns the 5800X into a yet to be announced 5700X. From the Ryzen Master manual:
A number of people disagreed with me when I said that AMD basically OC'ed Ryzen 5000 CPUs as much as possible right out of the gate to gain that coveted single threaded performance lead and it looks like it's exactly what people are dealing with now. Luckily enabling Eco Mode translates into a ~8% performance loss in MT Cinebench R20 scores which shouldn't affect games but it's still not pleasant for those who have shelled out $450. But here's a problem: the stock Ryzen 3700X scores around 4750 points while TDP limited 5800X scores around 5350 which is a 12% performance increase while costing 36% more.
Source 2.
Source 3.
Many have resorted to enabling Eco Mode in Ryzen Master which basically turns the 5800X into a yet to be announced 5700X. From the Ryzen Master manual:
Applying Eco-Mode lowers the processor’s power consumption from default stock to AMD’s lower, standard AM4 infrastructure power level (TDP).
‒ 105W and 95W TDP models shift to 65W
‒ 65W TDP models shift to 45W
• The processor continues to manage core voltage and frequency automatically to the reduced power levels - expect frequencies may be lower
• PBO, AOC and Manual overclocking are not supported when in Eco-Mode
• Expect to see lower peak frequencies from the cores under heavy multi-threaded workloads, though at lower power consumption.
• Eco-Mode may be useful when trading off Ryzen processor power for more graphics card power at the system level.
A number of people disagreed with me when I said that AMD basically OC'ed Ryzen 5000 CPUs as much as possible right out of the gate to gain that coveted single threaded performance lead and it looks like it's exactly what people are dealing with now. Luckily enabling Eco Mode translates into a ~8% performance loss in MT Cinebench R20 scores which shouldn't affect games but it's still not pleasant for those who have shelled out $450. But here's a problem: the stock Ryzen 3700X scores around 4750 points while TDP limited 5800X scores around 5350 which is a 12% performance increase while costing 36% more.
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