Hi, this is Wayne again with a topic “Ryzen 6000 Blew Me Away”.
[ Both Alexes ], The other guy’s CPUs, are hot and use too much power and are slow and ours are better and more efficient. But who is right In this Zephyrus G14? We have an AMD Ryzen, 9, 6900HS, nice and over here, an Intel i9-12900HK.. We already saw that Intel’s 12th gen was a massive step forward, but AMD claims they have a 2.62-times jump in performance per watt.. So can Ryzen 6000 reclaim the mobile CPU throne, We’ll give you the numbers after this segue to our sponsor Corsair.
Corsair’s new iCUE 5000T case offers a unique design: 208 individually, addressable RGB, LEDs and tons of builder-friendly features. Learn more at the link. Below. ( upbeat music. ) AMD’s Ryzen, 9 6900HS is a eight-core 16-thread CPU that, according to AMD, has been optimized from the ground up for exceptional performance per watt..
Unlike the upcoming desktop CPUs that will be using Zen 4 Ryzen 6000 Mobile uses Zen 3 Rembrandt architecture.. These chips are manufactured using TSMC’s six-nanometer process that earned them five slides of just how darn efficient they are., But how do AMD’s claims transfer to the real world? Well, the first thing I did with these two laptops is run Cinebench R23 and the results blew me. Away. The AMD Ryzen 9, 6900HS came shockingly close to the i9-12900HK and I say shocking because AMD’s chip has a TDP of 45 watts and Intel’s is 110.. Amd has been making a huge deal about the performance per watt of these chips and they just might be eh … No.
Nah nevermind.. Reviewing the hardware info logs show that the Intel chip briefly drew 110 watts, then quickly settled around 80, whereas the AMD chip, boosted to 80 watts and then settled around 75 meaning Intel might be onto something with their mixture of performance and efficiency. Cores. In laptops, the TD specs, you see, are largely meaningless.. The CPU will use. However, much power is available until either the cooler or the VRMs can’t take it anymore and good thing techtubers exist because there’s basically no way to know what a laptop CPU will do until someone goes out and tests it.
Since in laptops, whoever can get the best Performance while using the smallest amount of power wins, I devised a little test. Using the Asus Armoury Crate on AMD and Throttle Stop on Intel. I was able to equalize the TDPs of the CPUs, and then I ran the Blender BMW test to see how well they performed.. This way.
We can start at 70 watts and end at 20 to see which CPU will work best over the largest number of laptops. Out of the gate. Intel took the lead, as expected, with wins at 60 and 70 watts, but when we got to 50 watts, things started to change. Here. Amd took their first win and after that it was just a bloodbath.. The craziest bit is that between 30 and 25, watts Intel’s time increased by a whole minute.
That’s longer than it takes to order a water bottle at LTTstore.com.. I would’ve liked to go further, but at 20 watts AMD started disregarding the Armoury Crate limits and gave the CPU a little bit more juice. But at this point we can pretty safely guess Intel is not making a comeback.. I do want to be careful here because it is very possible that Intel hasn’t tuned the i9-1200HK to use under about 50 watts of power. In the future. The lower-power chips from them might be better in this range, but looking at their lineup, I’m pretty confident in my findings.
At 45. Watts Intel will have their P-series CPUs with six P-cores and eight E-cores with a Turbo power of 64 watts.. But once you get to the U series, where the TDP dips below 45 watts, the number of cores drops dramatically. At 15 watts.
Intel’S i7-1265U only gets two performance cores and I’m very suspicious that they’ll be heavily leaning on the 55-watt Turbo power to extract any performance from these CPUs.. Meanwhile, over at Team Red, it seems like AMD, can just take their eight-core 6900HS and limit the power to whatever TDP is needed, and the performance just scales linearly.. What all of this means is that the choice between AMD and Intel could come down to the TDP of the laptop that you’re looking for. Intel has the lead in outright performance. So if you need a beast of a gaming laptop with a TDP of over 45 watts, I’d lead towards Team Blue.. But if you want decent performance in a smaller machine, I’d go with AMD below 45 watts.. The bit that sucks for Intel is that I don’t know many people looking for desktop replacements., But I know loads of people that are looking for a reasonably well-performing laptop. That’S you know, light and has long, battery., Oh and speaking of which the battery life on the 6900HS is excellent..
Our last-gen Zephyrus G14 with a 5900HS, got us 5 hours and 42 minutes away from the wall, while the new 6900HS lasted a massive 11 hours and 11 minutes. Both have 76-watt hour batteries and 2K screens. So my only explanation is that AMD weren’t lying with that slide deck. Get subscribed because we’ll dig more into this in our full review of the Asus Zephyrus G14 next week.
I’ve only had what 26 hours with this thing, and that is not enough time to upload A video claiming it is the best Windows laptop in existence., Which it very well may be.. What is crazy, though, is that we haven’t even talked about what is potentially the biggest upgrade in Ryzen 6000 RDNA, 2 graphics, AKA, the same graphics, architecture in the PS5 and Xbox Series X. Don’t expect to be cranking the details in modern games, but at 1080p you Can play basically everything., Like we managed 85 FPS in “, Forza Horizon 5”, on low details., The Iris Xe graphics in the i9-12900HK only managed 46.
Damn.. This difference is so massive that for thin-and-lights, I don’t even know if I can recommend an Intel system since you’ll have such a better gaming experience on AMD. Honestly, I just can’t wait to see what kind of cool gaming devices will come out in the next couple Of years that take advantage of RDNA, 2. They’ve, already blown me away with the Steam Deck, and hopefully that’s only the tip of the iceberg.. So yeah AMD wasn’t able to take back the performance crown from Intel with Rembrandt, but they’ve managed to create a much more well-rounded CPU that holds up across the TDP range and features the best iGPU by a mile..
I can’t wait to see what laptops come out using these, and I also can’t wait to tell you about our sponsor Ting, Thanks to Ting Mobile for sponsoring today’s video.. Do you like saving money? Ting Mobile is a low-cost carrier with rates that help you do just that. Start with unlimited talk and text for $ 10 a month or data plans for $ 15 a month.. Their Set 12 plan with 12 gigs of data is only $ 35 a month, and if you need it, unlimited data plans are at $ 45 a month as well.. You can even share your data on a family plan to save even more.. Ting Mobile also offers pay-per-use plans and their Flex plans charging just $ 5 per gigabyte., Even with those savings, you’ll still get national-wide coverage and award-winning customer service..
In fact, Consumer Reports just named Ting Mobile, their number one carrier in America.. Almost every phone on the market will work with Ting Mobile and they have the perfect plan for everyone, no matter what your needs. Are.
Check them out at linus.ting.com to receive a $ 25 credit.. So thanks for watching., If you want to watch another video, maybe check out our review of the Steam Deck.. It used RDNA 2 in such a cool way.
.