Jump to content
Facebook Twitter Youtube

AMD Ryzen 7 2700 Review: The Non-X Factor


vMuz1c-♕™
 Share

Recommended Posts

AMD's Ryzen 7 2700 includes the same eight cores as its more expensive Ryzen 7 2700X flagship, plus simultaneous multi-threading technology that allows each core to work on two software threads at the same time. But its clock rates are trimmed back to create a $30-cheaper model sporting a little less performance. Even though the 2700 loses its enthusiast-targeted X modifier, AMD still arms the chip with an unlocked ratio multiplier for flexible overclocking. And this less expensive CPU should hit nearly the same frequencies as the Ryzen 7 2700X we like so much.

AMD Ryzen 7 2700

aHR0cDovL21lZGlhLmJlc3RvZm1pY3JvLmNvbS9DL1QvNzcxNTgxL29yaWdpbmFsL1J5emVuLTctMjcwMC5qcGc=ZXR5cGU6OmltcHx1dWlkOjoydDZkODlzc2dnfGVzdWJ0eXBlOjpidXlidHRufGJ1dHRvbklkOjpFS1hJSklDLTE1MjY3NTk3MTA2Nzk4MHxwcm9kdWN0SWQ6OkVLWElKSUN8bWVyY2hhbnQ6OkFtYXpvbnxwcmljZTo6JDI5OXx0cmFuc2FjdGlvbklkOjoxNTI2NzU5NzEwNjc5ODB8c2l0ZTo6VEhVU3x0aW1lc3RhbXA6OjE1MjY3NTk3MTB8Z3VpZDo6ZW5fVVNfMThfUmV2aWV3XzU2MDY=?p=eyJDQVRFR09SWSI6ImNwdXMiLCJUQUdTIjoiY3B1cyxjb21wb25lbnRzLGFtZCIsIkZJTkdFUlBSSU5UIjoiNjg1ZmFiNDVjYjljZWUyYTEzODdiMTkzODY0NWU4NzIiLCJ2aXNpdG9yX2lkIjoidmlzaXRvci0xNTI2NzU5NzM4ODU1IiwiYnV0dG9uSWQiOiJ0aGF1cy1FS1hJSklDIiwiQkJDIjoiU2hvcHBpbmdCbG9ja190ZW1wbGF0ZV9idXR0b24iLCJ0cmFuc2FjdGlvbklkIjoiNjI1NDE1MjY3NTk3Mzg4NTgiLCJjb250ZW50SUQiOiJ0aGF1czplbl9VU18xOF9SZXZpZXdfNTYwNiJ9
Pros
  • Faster than previous-gen Ryzen models
  • Bundled cooler adds value
  • Backward compatibility with 300-series motherboards
  • Indium solder improves thermal transfer
Cons
  • Needs a better cooler for overclocking
  • No value-oriented 400-series motherboards yet
  • Large performance deficit compared to a stock Ryzen 7 2700X
Verdict

AMD's first-generation "non-X" Ryzen processors were universally hailed as budget champions. That changes with the company's 2000-series CPUs, though. Its Ryzen 7 2700 is only $30 cheaper than the 2700X. Given a choice between them, we'd rather have the flagship's great performance and capable bundled cooler for a few dollars more.

Last generation, plenty of overclocking headroom and lower prices earned AMD's non-X Ryzen SKUs praise up and down the stack. Much of that was based on the company's bundled coolers, though. For example, the then-flagship Ryzen 7 1800X launched at $500 with no thermal solution at all. Meanwhile, the Ryzen 7 1700 sold for $330 with a cooler in the box. Now, AMD bundles a heat sink and fan with all of its new Ryzen chips. Moreover, it only sells 2700 at a $30 discount. Worse, although it's possible to match Ryzen 7 2700X's performance after a bit of overclocking, you need an aftermarket cooler to get there. AMD's freebie won't cut it. This time around, there's not much reason to step down a tier.

Ryzen 7 2700

With its 2000-series Ryzen processors, AMD was challenged to deliver more than the incremental improvements we've been seeing from Intel lately. To begin, the company swapped out its 14nm manufacturing process with a 12nm node, enabling higher clock rates at the same power consumption levels. AMD also optimized the Zen architecture by adding more sophisticated multi-core boost algorithms and lowering cache and memory latencies. Together, those changes enable speed-ups in pretty much every type of workload we test with, and they're all baked in to Ryzen 7 2700.

AMD rates its Ryzen 7 2700 at a much lower 65W thermal design power than its 105W Ryzen 7 2700X. That's partly why the 2700's base frequency is a much more conservative 3.2 GHz, while its maximum Precision Boost clock rate tops out at 4.1 GHz. You'd think, then, that the bundled 95W Wraith Spire thermal solution with LED lighting would be beefy enough for aggressive overclocking. It's not, though. If you're really after Ryzen's peak potential, purchase a more capable aftermarket heat sink/fan combination or closed-loop liquid cooler.

All 2000-series Ryzen CPUs are compatible with motherboards sporting new X470 or older 300-series chipsets. You can even overclock the new processors on value-oriented B-series platforms. While lower-cost 400-series chipsets aren't available yet, we're counting on them to offer a more affordable option for enthusiasts looking to tune 2000-series Ryzen CPUs.

The Ryzen 7 2700 supports up to DDR4-2933 memory, just like the 2700X. Just be aware that you'll only get those data rates with single-rank modules installed in a maximum of two slots. Even then, it takes a motherboard with six PCB layers to operate at 2933 MT/s stably. AMD uses Indium solder between its Ryzen 7 die and heat spreader, improving thermal transfer performance compared to Intel CPUs reliant on paste instead.

Like all 2000-series models, the Ryzen 7 2700 comes with v, which is a software-based tiering solution that blends the low price and high capacity of hard drives with the speed of an SSD, 3D XPoint, or even up to 2GB of RAM.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Join the conversation

You can post now and register later. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.

Guest
Reply to this topic...

×   Pasted as rich text.   Paste as plain text instead

  Only 75 emoji are allowed.

×   Your link has been automatically embedded.   Display as a link instead

×   Your previous content has been restored.   Clear editor

×   You cannot paste images directly. Upload or insert images from URL.

 Share

WHO WE ARE?

CsBlackDevil Community [www.csblackdevil.com], a virtual world from May 1, 2012, which continues to grow in the gaming world. CSBD has over 70k members in continuous expansion, coming from different parts of the world.

 

 

Important Links