AMD's EPYC 9755 "Turin" CPU based on the Zen 5 core architecture has been tested and scores a massive performance in the CPU-z benchmark.
Yesterday, we got to see the first possible running sample of the AMD EPYC 9755 Turin CPU and now, HXL (@9550pro) has published the first benchmark result of the chip within CPU-z and the result is quite the deal.
The AMD EPYC 9755 CPU is part of the 5th Gen EPYC family, codenamed Turin, featuring 128 cores and 256 threads based on the Zen 5 core architecture. The CPU has a base clock of 2.70 GHz and is said to boost up to 4.10 GHz boost clock speeds. This marks a 33% increase in core/thread count & 11% increase in clock speeds. The CPU also features a huge pool of cache, with 512 MB of L3, 128 MB of L2, and 10 MB of L1, totaling 650 MB cache. This is an increase of 31% over the last EPYC flagship based on the Zen 4 architecture, the EPYC 9654 (Genoa).
The performance of this heavy-weight server chip was tested in CPU-z in which it scored 653.7 points in the single-core test which is strong given the lower single-core clocks but the multi-core score is a phenomenal 108,093 points.