Saturday, 26 May 2018

Two New 35W Raven Ridge Parts: AMD Athlon 200GE and Athlon Pro 200GE

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In this interesting world where processors are released but not formally announced, it means that when diving through the lists of supported CPUs on certain motherboards, we might find processors we have never heard of before. Thanks to some sleuthing on Twitter by one of our followers, we can detail that AMD has two new 35W Ryzen processors that we previously did not know about.

Over on the ASUS Crosshair VII Hero CPU supported list, the two new processors are listed, supported as of BIOS 0509:

Traditionally AMD uses the Athlon name for its combined CPU/GPU processors that have the GPU disabled (which AMD calls its NPUs, or non-accelerated processing units). What makes this interesting is that based on Geekbench data already submitted to the results database (on an ASUS B350M motherboard), these parts both have integrated graphics.

Between the two sources, it shows that the processors are essentially identical, with the difference in the Pro variant being that it falls under AMD’s commercial brand for customer support. The part then is a dual core processor with hyperthreading, running at a base frequency of 3.2 GHz, at a 35W TDP, and either 2 MB or 4 MB of L3 cache (both sources state something different: ASUS lists 4 MB, which is usually more accurate). Neither source states a turbo frequency, so it might come to pass that the Athlon processors do not have any turbo, but also missing is the information about the integrated graphics. Neither ASUS’ support list nor Geekbench traditionally lists this data. Geekbench does list it as a Raven Ridge part (which makes sense, being a CPU+GPU design), which would also mean it is built on 14nm.

Ryzen APUs
AnandTech Cores Base Turbo GPU TDP
Mobile
Ryzen 7 Pro 2700U 4C / 8T 2.2 GHz 3.8 GHz Vega 10 15 W
Ryzen 5 Pro 2500U 4C / 8T 2.0 GHz 3.6 GHz Vega 8 15 W
Ryzen 3 Pro 2300U 4C / 4T 2.5 GHz 3.4 GHz Vega 6 15 W
Desktop
Ryzen 5 2400G 4C / 8T 3.6 GHz 3.9 GHz Vega 11 65 W
Ryzen 5 Pro 2400G 4C / 8T 3.6 GHz 3.9 GHz Vega 11 65 W
Ryzen 5 2400GE 4C / 8T 3.2 GHz 3.8 GHz Vega 11 35 W
Ryzen 5 Pro 2400GE 4C / 8T 3.2 GHz 3.8 GHz Vega 11 35 W
Ryzen 3 2200G 4C / 4T 3.5 GHz 3.7 GHz Vega 8 65 W
Ryzen 3 Pro 2200G 4C / 4T 3.5 GHz 3.7 GHz Vega 8 65 W
Ryzen 3 2200GE 4C / 4T 3.2 GHz 3.6 GHz Vega 8 35 W
Ryzen 3 Pro 2200GE 4C / 4T 3.2 GHz 3.6 GHz Vega 8 35 W
Athlon 200GE
YD200GC6M2OFB
2C / 4T 3.2 GHz ? ? 35 W
Athlon Pro 200GE
YD200GC6M20FB
2C / 4T 3.2 GHz ? ? 35 W

Normally when processors are not announced with the rest of the set, it means one of two things. First, they are not important for the story, and so from a PR perspective it makes sense to the company to leave them out of materials (no matter how much that bothers the media), or that these processors are ‘off-roadmap’, and are built to order from a specific customer. At this point we are unsure of where AMD stands on these parts.

It is worth noting that these parts do not have the ‘Ryzen’ name in them.

Given the fact that it is a long weekend in the US, while we have reached out to our contacts at AMD, we are not expecting a response until Tuesday. More information as we get it.

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