- AMD drops quadricages fleas by making an epyc with 8 cores the new standard
- The ZEN 5 EPYC 4005 series targets small businesses and IT suppliers
- IS / S Improved Speeds and Safety Functions in all repercussions
AMD launched its EPYC 4005 processors, a new range for small and medium -sized businesses and has hosted IT service providers.
These processors are designed to provide advanced features in affordable and easy -to -use systems that meet the needs of modern infrastructure.
With this launch, AMD has banned quadricages servers from the Epyc range. By making 8-core 4345p its new reference base, the chip giant indicates that it considers that higher nuclei count as the new normal for entry-level uniform deployments.
Performance, simplicity and affordability
This decision follows the wider AMD effort to bring more capable silicon to the entry -level segment.
Built on Zen 5 architecture, the EPYC 4005 series remains compatible with existing AM5 platforms while offering upgrades in performance, memory speed and connectivity.
The chips support up to 192 GB of DDR5 memory at speeds up to 5,600 mt / s, with two memory channels and ECC care. PCIe Gen 5 is included with up to 28 lanes, offering 40% more than the comparable Xeon fleas.
The EPYC 4565P leads the battery with 16 cores, 32 threads, a 170W TDP and a basic frequency of 4.3 GHz. According to AMD tests, this chip surpasses the Intel Xeon 6369p by a factor of 1.83x in the PHORONIX test suite.
Compared to the E-2400 and Xeon 6300p of Intel series, AMD claims a cost per lower heart, up to five times the cache (128 MB L3 vs 24 MB) and the full AVX-512 support throughout the range.
“Growing companies and dedicated hosts are often confronted with important constraints concerning the budget, complexity and deployment times,” said Derek Dicker, Vice-President of Business, Company and HPC Business Group, AMD.
“With the latest AMD EPYC 4005 processors, we offer the right balance between performance, simplicity and affordability, giving our customers and system partners the possibility of deploying business class solutions that resolve daily trade challenges.”
The chips are also equipped with the Secure AMD processor, offering features such as TPM 2.0, secure start and memory encryption. SMT is supported in all SKUs.
With absent quadricages models and six -core options potentially defined to be sidelined, AMD sends a clear message with its new processors in the Epyc 4005 series which expect the basic servers to provide more.