Zen 3 In 2023: AMD Intros Ryzen Embedded 5000 CPUs For Networking Systems, Up To 16 Cores

Jason R. Wilson
Zen 3 In 2023: AMD Intros Ryzen Embedded 5000 CPUs For Networking Systems, Up To 16 Cores 1

It might be 2023 but Zen 3 isn't going anywhere as AMD has launched its brand new Ryzen Embedded 5000 CPUs for networking customers.

AMD Leverages Its Tried & Tested Zen 3 Architecture For Ryzen Embedded 5000 CPUs With Up To 16 Cores

The AMD Ryzen Embedded 5000 CPUs are the company's latest Zen 3-based processor family, including the Ryzen Embedded V3000 and EPYC Embedded 7000 series.

Related Story AMD Reportedly Says No To FSR 4 For RDNA 3.5, Stripping Ryzen AI 300/400 APUs Of Latest Upscaling Technology

Ryzen Embedded 5000 processors deliver the ideal combination of performance and reliability required for 24×7 security and networking applications. This expansion of our embedded product portfolio offers a mid-range solution that fills the gap between our low-power BGA Ryzen Embedded and our world-class EPYC embedded family for customers requiring both high performance and scalability of up to 16 cores.

— Rajneesh Gaur, corporate vice president & general manager, Embedded Solutions Group, AMD

The new AMD Ryzen Embedded 5000 CPUs are built on the 7nm process node technology and will offer a "planned five-year manufacturing availability," equipped with six, eight, twelve, or sixteen cores and support for up to 24 lanes of PCIe Gen4 connectivity. The Ryzen Embedded 5000 Series CPUs are developed for reliability to support the consistent uptime requirements needed by security and networking enterprises.

AMD's new Ryzen Embedded 5000 CPUs include robust reliability, availability, and serviceability (RAS) options, which will consist of an ECC-supported memory subsystem & TDP profiles between 65 W to 105 W. Additionally, AMD Ryzen Embedded 5000 CPUs reduce the overall system cooling footprint for tight spaces and "cost-sensitive applications."

AMD’s success in the embedded market is built on offering differentiated and scalable offerings that address a wide range of applications with different power, performance and environmental requirements. The AMD Ryzen Embedded 5000 strikes an optimal balance of power and performance for applications ranging from small-form factor embedded systems to storage, security, and networking systems, suiting the broadest range of customers and use cases.

— Kevin Krewell, principal analyst, TIRIAS Research

Image source: AMD

The AMD Ryzen Embedded 5000 Series processors offer:

  • Scalability up to 16 cores and 32 threads
  • Up to 64MB of shared L3 CPU Cache
  • Energy efficient TDP from 65W to 105W
  • ECC-supported memory and security features
  • 24 lanes of PCIe 4 connectivity (expandable I/O up to 36 lanes with AMD X570 chipset)
  • Optimized performance for enterprise reliability

For more information about AMD's line of embedded processors for networking solutions and pricing for enterprises of any size, you can find out more on the company's Embedded Processors official webpage or at AMD's company website.

AMD Ryzen Embedded 5000 Series CPUs

ModelCPU CoresThreads countCPU Base Freq (GHz)CPU 1T Boost Freq (up to GHz)L3 CPU Cache (MB)Nominal TDP (W)DDR4 ChannelsMax DDR4 rate (MT/s) (1DPC)PCIe® Gen 4 LanesSocket
5950E16323.053.4641052320024AM4
5900E12243.353.7641052320024AM4
5800E8163.43.7321002320024AM4
5600E6123.33.632652320024AM4

News Source: AMD

Jason R. Wilson Photo

About the author: Jason R. Wilson is a member of the Hardware news team at Wccftech. Equipped with a background in graphic design and writing, Jason works daily to improve his craft and continues to create new and innovative ideas every day.

Follow Wccftech on Google to get more of our news coverage in your feeds.

Button