The
AMD Ryzen 7 4700 is a processor from AMDs Ryzen 7 series, which comes from the third generation of this series. It was released in the second quarter of 2022 and is based on a chiplet chip design. The processor is manufactured with a structure width of 7 nanometers and is based on AMDs Renoir (Zen 2) processor architecture. The
AMD Ryzen 7 4700 has an 8.00 megabyte level 3 cache and can be installed on all mainboards with the AMD socket AM4 (LGA 1331).
The processor is based on a standard core architecture, which means that all cores have the same structure, which means that clock and turbo clock are identical. The base clock frequency of the cores of the AMD Ryzen 7 4700 is 3.60 gigahertz and the maximum turbo clock is 4.40 gigahertz. The processor supports hyperthreading technology, which means that the 8 existing processor cores can be converted into 16 computing threads if required. In this way, tasks that do not require full clock performance can be executed faster. Like all AMD Ryzen desktop processors, the
AMD Ryzen 7 4700 also has a free multiplier, which makes it easy to overclock. If you consider this, however, an extended processor cooling is required, e.g. AIO water cooling is suitable for this.
The
AMD Ryzen 7 4700 does not have its own internal graphics unit, which means that it can only be operated with a dedicated graphics card. The processor has 12 PCIe lines for connecting the graphics card.
The AMD Ryzen 7 4700 has 2 memory channels with which it can operate up to 64 gigabytes of RAM. The maximum bandwidth that the processor achieves in the main memory is 51.2 GB/s. In principle, only RAM of the DDR4 type can be used with the processor, AMD specifies the exact type as DDR4-3200, but in practice higher clocked memory modules can usually also be used.
- Integrated graphics unit
- Solid multi-core performance
- Efficient 7 nm manufacturing