AMD Launches 12 Desktop Renoir Ryzen 4000G Series APUs: But You Can’t Buy Them
by Dr. Ian Cutress on July 21, 2020 9:00 AM ESTToday AMD is finally lifting the lid on its long-awaited desktop Zen2 based APU family. Using the same silicon as in the Ryzen Mobile 4000 family, AMD is pumping it up into 35 W and 65 models in the same AM4 platform that is in use today. There has been strong demand from PC builders to release these chips, which were on the topics of forum conversation all the way back at CES. There’s only one downside to these new processors: you can’t buy them on their own. AMD states that the initial release of Ryzen 4000G hardware is for OEMs like Dell and HP only for their pre-built systems.
The new processors use the same 8-core Zen2 plus 8 compute unit Vega that we saw in Ryzen Mobile 4000 at the beginning of the year, but as with previous APU launches, the frequency and power thermals have been pushed up into more manageable desktop environments. To that end, AMD will be launching hardware in the Ryzen 7, Ryzen 5, and Ryzen 3 product lines at both 65 W and 35 W, all on the AM4 platform.
AMD Ryzen 4000G Series APUs | |||||||
AnandTech | C/T | Base Freq |
Turbo Freq |
GPU CUs |
GPU Freq |
PCIe * |
TDP |
Ryzen 4000G | |||||||
Ryzen 7 4700G | 8 / 16 | 3600 | 4400 | 8 | 2100 | 16+4+4 | 65 W |
Ryzen 7 4700GE | 8 / 16 | 3100 | 4300 | 8 | 2000 | 16+4+4 | 35 W |
Ryzen 5 4600G | 6 / 12 | 3700 | 4200 | 7 | 1900 | 16+4+4 | 65 W |
Ryzen 5 4600GE | 6 / 12 | 3300 | 4200 | 7 | 1900 | 16+4+4 | 35 W |
Ryzen 3 4300G | 4 / 8 | 3800 | 4000 | 6 | 1700 | 16+4+4 | 65 W |
Ryzen 3 4300GE | 4 / 8 | 3500 | 4000 | 6 | 1700 | 16+4+4 | 35 W |
Ryzen Pro 4000G | |||||||
Ryzen 7 Pro 4700G | 8 / 16 | 3600 | 4400 | 8 | 2100 | 16+4+4 | 65 W |
Ryzen 7 Pro 4750GE | 8 / 16 | 3100 | 4300 | 8 | 2000 | 16+4+4 | 35 W |
Ryzen 5 Pro 4650G | 6 / 12 | 3700 | 4200 | 7 | 1900 | 16+4+4 | 65 W |
Ryzen 5 Pro 4650GE | 6 / 12 | 3300 | 4200 | 7 | 1900 | 16+4+4 | 35 W |
Ryzen 3 Pro 4350G | 4 / 8 | 3800 | 4000 | 6 | 1700 | 16+4+4 | 65 W |
Ryzen 3 Pro 4350GE | 4 / 8 | 3500 | 4000 | 6 | 1700 | 16+4+4 | 35 W |
*PCIe lanes on the SoC are listed in GFX+Chipset+Storage |
The top processor is the Ryzen 7 4700G, coming in at 65 W TDP with a base frequency of 3.6 GHz and a turbo frequency of 4.4 GHz. It uses all eight compute units for the graphics, running at a mind-numbing 2100 MHz.
At the lower end is the Ryzen 3 4300G, with four cores and eight threads, with a base of 3.8 GHz and a turbo of 4.0 GHz, which should mean that performance is very consistent. This part has six compute units for graphics, running at 1700 MHz.
Every version has a GE counterpart at 35 W, which for the most part reduces the base frequency and TDP only. The exception is the Ryzen 7, where 100 MHz is lost on turbo and 100 MHz is lost on graphics.
All the APUs support DDR4-3200, and have sixteen PCIe 3.0 lanes for add-in cards, as well as four PCIe 3.0 lanes for storage. On the PCIe lanes, the reason this is PCIe 3.0 and not PCIe 4.0 is because the equivalent mobile chip was built with eight PCIe 3.0 lanes for add-in cards, to save on power in a mobile environment. AMD sees these chips being used mostly on their own without a separate discrete graphics card, given that the company already has the Ryzen 3 CPU family for those that want discrete graphics.
At the same time as the Ryzen 4000G APUs, AMD is also launching the Ryzen Pro 4000G versions for the commercial market. These specifications mirror the standard Ryzen counterparts, but fall under AMD’s Pro Technologies feature set, with additional security, manageability, and business ready pillars. This includes full memory encryption and support for DASH management, OS image stability over 18 months, guaranteed processor availability for 24 months, and enhanced QA.
So they are OEM only? What?
Just to be clear, AMD specified OEM and not system integrators (SIs). On our call, AMD clarified that the market for its APUs is skewed very heavily towards the big mass-market prebuilt customers like HP and Dell, rather than custom home builds. The numbers quoted were around 80% of all APU sales end up in these systems, and by working with OEMs only, AMD can also help manage stock levels of the Renoir silicon coming out of the fabs between desktops and notebooks.
What this means is that unless you are choosing to buy a pre-built office-focused business PC, then the only way to get hold of these processors would be through distributors who are selling them piecemeal – AMD is not creating official boxes and bundles with coolers for these processors.
Those pre-built office-focused business PCs are expected to be out shortly. Just in case you control a corporate budget and need a few hundred of them.
Will we ever get Ryzen 4000 APUs for Desktop?
AMD says that they are planning a consumer-grade release of APUs ‘soon’. It was stated in our briefing call that there will be a launch of a future Zen2 APU for the consumer market compatible with 500-series motherboards. The company specifically did not say 400-series, but did clarify that the 4000G series announced today was for 400 and 500 series.
When exactly this launch will come, and what it will be, and what price ranges AMD will be aiming for is unclear. As mentioned, we were discussing Zen 2 based Renoir desktop APUs with vendors back in January, and at this point it certainly feels late to the game. Could AMD be hiding something up its sleeve? A PCIe 4.0 version perhaps (would this require new silicon?) or maybe something up at the 105 W TDP performance level? It really is unclear.
There’s also some new Zen+ APUs
For the lower end of the prebuilt market, AMD is also offering a new set of Zen+ APUs. These are the first desktop parts to carry the Athlon Gold and Athlon Silver branding.
AMD Athlon 3000G Series | |||||||
AnandTech | C/T | Base Freq |
Turbo Freq |
GPU CUs |
GPU Freq |
PCIe * |
TDP |
Athlon 3000G | |||||||
Athlon Gold 3150G | 4 / 4 | ? | 3900 | 3 | 1100 | 8+4+4 | 65 W |
Athlon Gold 3150GE | 4 / 4 | ? | 3800 | 3 | 1100 | 8+4+4 | 35 W |
Athlon Silver 3050GE | 2 / 4 | 3400 | - | 3 | 1100 | 4+2+2 | 35 W |
Athlon Pro 3000G | |||||||
Athlon Gold Pro 3150G | 4 / 4 | 3500 | 3900 | 3 | 1100 | 8+4+4 | 65 W |
Athlon Gold Pro 3150GE | 4 / 4 | 3300 | 3800 | 3 | 1100 | 8+4+4 | 35 W |
Athlon Silver Pro 3125GE | 2 / 4 | 3400 | - | 3 | 1100 | 4+2+2 | 35 W |
PCIe lanes on the SoC are listed as GFX+Chipset+Storage |
We believe these to be based on the same silicon as the Athlon Gold and Athlon Silver mobile parts. We're still waiting on full details for the 3000G family.
The Final Word: We were told that there will be a reviewers’ guide shared with us. Whether that is for these OEM-only parts, or for something upcoming, we don’t know. But we have our fingers crossed.
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goatfajitas - Tuesday, July 21, 2020 - link
These are OEM parts for companies like Dell and Lenovo to build small systems and all in ones with. Not the top end parts. For example this will be what you get when you buy a Lenovo Tiny Desktop https://www.lenovo.com/us/en/desktops-and-all-in-o...limitedaccess - Tuesday, July 21, 2020 - link
It's actually 16 lanes. It's just split as x8 x4 x4. So only x8 is available as the largest maximum connection, which typically goes to graphics.Desktop non APU Ryzen's are 24 lanes split at x16, x4 x4. Typically it's split to graphics, nvme, and chipset.
I'm guessing these will typically be x8 graphics (or top slot), x4 nvme, x4 chipset.
oleyska - Tuesday, July 21, 2020 - link
it has more pci-e lanes, Renoir has 24 lanes or so.most laptop designs use 18 pci-e lanes
2 M2 slots, M2 Wifi, Lan + gpu.
That is atleast the configuration my 4800H is configured with, 18 pci-e lanes in use which is more than raven ridge.
brucethemoose - Tuesday, July 21, 2020 - link
Those extra lanes come from the chipset.Nioktefe - Tuesday, July 21, 2020 - link
As far as I know there's no chipset on mobilejeremyshaw - Tuesday, July 21, 2020 - link
Are you sure one of your M.2 slots isn't a 2 lane slot? 16 total lanes sounds more likely, since it reflects the die shot analysis a bit better.DanNeely - Tuesday, July 21, 2020 - link
They're rebadged laptop parts not intended to be used with a discrete GPU. 8 lanes breaks out as 1 x4 for the SSD, and 4 x1 for everything else (wifi, audio, etc, etc).They're PCIe3 only to keep idle power down (and battery life up). Unless future process improvements reduce power significantly I suspect mainstream laptops will stay on 3.0 for a while.
Spunjji - Wednesday, July 22, 2020 - link
The laptop parts are, in fact, designed to be used with a GPU in many use cases - that's the whole point of them having SmartShift technology. I think others already covered the fact that they have more than 8 lanes in total - 8 is just the largest single cluster.Drkrieger01 - Tuesday, July 21, 2020 - link
If you're wanting more than 8 lanes, and faster than PCIe 3.0, they'll expect you'll want the horsepower that comes with the full desktop CPU's (non APU sku's). There's little reason to pair a high end dedicated GPU with the iGPU on these, and 8x PCIe 3.0 is more than enough for even the most demanding gaming titles. If you're doing 'Prosumer' production, you wouldn't be buying an APU ;)Irata - Tuesday, July 21, 2020 - link
Check Anandtech's "AMD Details Renoir" article. It says the following regarding PCIe 3 lanes:"Each chip has sixteen PCIe 3.0 lanes, split such that x8 is available for a graphics card, and two x4 links for storage. There are separate PCIe lanes for other modules such as Wi-Fi 6 or mobile network access (4G/5G)."
The odd thing is that this indicates that there are more than 16 lanes since this gives you
8 - dGPU
2x4 = 8 - storage
So we're already at 16 lanes, but AT say (and the diagram shows this) "There are separate PCIe lanes for other modules".