Given the performance gains in Zen 2 over its predecessor Zen 1, it was quite predictable to expect the dominance of Day 1 records on the 3rd Generation Ripper. But their number was a little surprising.
At the moment, the record of a 32-core Ryzen Threadripper 3970X processor overclocking belongs to the Taiwanese overclocker TSAIK:
The chip’s frequency was 5752.97MHz and it was achieved by using liquid nitrogen cooling, and the processor itself was installed in the MSI Creator TRX40 (MS-7C59) motherboard.
Further, a South Korean enthusiast under the nickname safedisk distinguished himself. He set six records at once on a 32-core monster:
The overclocker got the first three golds in the Geekbench3 – Multi-Core discipline, one of them in the global 32-core chips rank, and the second turned out to be a world record among absolutely all processors with any number of cores.
In fact, the Korean showed the same result in Cinebench R15. One more absolute world record for all chips.
The new AMD processors are amazing. And this despite the fact that AMD has not yet released a 64-core, 128-thread model! It’s hard to even imagine what will happen in the HWBot database when the 3990X will be released.
But let’s move on to other results, because another world record awaits us, and now from the Romanian overclocker under the pseudonym Alex@ro:
This time, the enthusiast chose the not very popular discipline Cinebench R20 and took absolutely all the trophies in it: both in the current CPU rank and among absolutely all CPUs.
Well, the last on the list, but far from less significant, is the world record of the Italian overclocker rsannino in the wPrime – 1024m discipline:
Links to all AMD Ryzen Threadripper 3970X processor results in HwBot database:
- WPRIME – 1024M – 14sec 154ms @ 5559MHz (RSANNINO, Italy)
- Cinebench R11.5 – MT – 110.28 points @ 5450MHz (LUCKY_NOOB, Indonesia)
- GPUPI – 1B – 31sec 67ms @ 5625.5MHz (SAFEDISK of South Korea)
- Cinebench R20 – MT – 23081 points @ 5375MHz (ALEX@RO, Romania)
- Cinebench R15 – MT – 10672 points @ 5525MHz (SAFEDISK, South Korea)
- Cinebench R15 – Extreme – 2362 points @ 4468MHz (KEEPH8N, USA)
- Cinebench R11.5 – MT – 81.04 points @ 5199MHz (KEEPH8N, USA)
- Geekbench 3 – Multi-Core – 185114 points @ 5525MHz (SAFEDISK, South Korea)
All of the above is just the first signs and soon we are expecting an update of records in 3DMark and other graphic disciplines. We will try to keep you updated on the new CPU scorecard changes.