At Computex 2022, the CEO of AMD, Dr. Lisa Sui, unveiled its Ryzen 7000 series of processors, as well as the associated AM5 platform. But while discussing specific details about its new platform for Zen 4 and beyond, AMD inadvertently ended up creating a conflux of confusion around the AM5 platform by quoting different power figures to different groups. Ultimately, at different points AMD was quoting 170 Watts as both the highest nominal TDP supported by the platform, as well as the Power Package Tracking (PPT) rating, which is the absolute highest amount of power a chip can draw under load. It goes without saying that these two claims shouldn't both be right, and a correction was needed.

As first reported by the Tom's Hardware crew, AMD has published a statement addressing the confusion, and proving the correct values. In short, the 170 Watt TDP was correct. Meanwhile the PPT value is actually 230 Watts – which at 1.35x the TDP rating, is typical for AMD's Ryzen processors.

AMD's full statement is below:

AMD would like to issue a correction to the socket power and TDP limits of the upcoming AMD Socket AM5. AMD Socket AM5 supports up to a 170W TDP with a PPT of up to 230W. TDP*1.35 is the standard calculation for TDP v. PPT for AMD sockets in the “Zen” era, and the new 170W TDP group is no exception (170*1.35=229.5). 

This new TDP group will enable considerably more compute performance for high core count CPUs in heavy compute workloads, which will sit alongside the 65W and 105W TDP groups that Ryzen is known for today. AMD takes great pride in providing the enthusiast community with transparent and forthright product capabilities, and we want to take this opportunity to apologize for our error and any subsequent confusion we may have caused on this topic.

The overall increase in power specification figures for the AM5 platform was not unexpected – part of the benefit of the move to LGA sockets is additional pins for power delivery – but this finally settles the matter of just how much power AMD's new socket and platform are designed to deliver. Motherboard vendors will no doubt go (well) past this on their high-end boards, of course, but 170W/230W will be the baseline for any motherboard that wants to officially support high-end AM5 chips.

CPU power consumption has been on the rise for the past several years, as we're now well into the Dark Silicon era. While an individual CPU core still only draws a modest amount of power – on the order of 20W to 30W for a high-performance core – the total power requirement quickly balloons for high-end processors, which pack upwards of 16 cores. As a result, power delivery limits are typically the constraining factor for heavily multi-threaded workloads, as CPUs have to back down on clockspeeds in order to stay within their power envelopes. Increasing platform power limits, in turn, offers more headroom for keeping more cores clocked higher more often.

Though it should be noted that AMD's clarifications today are for the AM5 socket, not the initial Ryzen 7000 series chips that will use it. AMD doesn't necessarily have to tap into the full TDP of the socket right away – though for the aforementioned MT performance reasons, there's good reason to. So officially, we still don't know what the TDPs of the high-end Ryzen 7000 processors will be; but unofficially, it wouldn't be surprising to see the top chips approach 170 Watts.

Finally, it would seem that we should expect to see the Ryzen 7000 family hit that full TDP out of the gate. According to a comment from an AMD spokesperson on Reddit, the top TDP of the Ryzen 7000 series will indeed be 170 Watts, with PPTs reaching 230 Watts.

Source: AMD (via Tom's Hardware)

Comments Locked

21 Comments

View All Comments

  • Golgatha777 - Friday, May 27, 2022 - link

    The irony here is the 5800X uses the same amount of power as the 5950X. Now the 5700X is a great low power chips that is within 5% or less of the performance of a 5800X. Honestly, I wish the 5700X was available at launch, as I have two 5800X chips, and both are very hard to cool properly.
  • Spoelie - Sunday, May 29, 2022 - link

    You can turn a 5800x into a "5700x" with 1-3 bios settings (eco mode or pbo limits), depending on your board
  • Akram Al - Friday, May 27, 2022 - link

    Intel has started this war with Alder Lake CPU(higher performance with higher wattage). And now, it is AMD's turn. 50% or higher of Zen4 performance comes from higher clock speed. I think this is a very quick and dirty fix to stay in competition. You should stick with: advanced packaging means better performance and same wattage. Going from 7nm to 5nm process should make better performance chips with the same wattage or same with less wattage.
  • lmcd - Friday, May 27, 2022 - link

    Huh? The FX-9590 existed. If anything, the low-power blip lasted longer than expected.
  • brucethemoose - Saturday, May 28, 2022 - link

    TBH Nvidia/AMD really started the war with bonkers GPU TDPs, as they showed that consumers (as a whole) don't particularly care about efficiency.

    The FX-9000 series was an anomaly Intel ignored, as buying one never make any sense.
  • lemurbutton - Friday, May 27, 2022 - link

    Meh. Apple is leading the charge with high performance and low power SoCs. AMD and Intel are doing the opposite. It might be time for Qualcomm with Nuvia to come in and kick AMD and Intel's ass on the PC side soon.
  • shabby - Friday, May 27, 2022 - link

    Can i buy that m2 ultra and stick it in my pc?
  • melgross - Saturday, May 28, 2022 - link

    Why would anyone want to buy a pc? You get what you deserve.
  • Ian Cutress - Sunday, May 29, 2022 - link

    *gestures wildly at ~360m PCs bought last year*
  • Zodwraith - Thursday, June 2, 2022 - link

    I'd take this with a grain of salt before going all doom and gloom. People have been exaggerating the effects of Intel's thermal ceiling for years. It's pretty rare I'm pinging my CPU at 100% for more than a short while it hardly effects room temps. You just need adequate cooling for those bursts.

    If you _are_ constantly running @100% you should be looking into HEDT or low end server solutions instead of strangling a mainstream desktop CPU for all it's worth. That means you're costing yourself in productivity more than a few higher dollar AC bill.

    Now GPUs I'll agree need to be reigned in as they actually are ran at full tilt for hours and they're already getting ridiculous. My room becomes noticeably warmer while gaming but never while compiling or decompressing even though I have one of those "OMG how do you put up with all that HEAT?!" Intel chips.

Log in

Don't have an account? Sign up now