

🔥 Power your professional edge with the ultimate 32-core beast!
The AMD Ryzen Threadripper 3970X is a desktop processor engineered for professionals demanding extreme multitasking and multithreaded performance. Featuring 32 cores, 64 threads, a 4.5 GHz max boost clock, and a massive 144MB cache, it excels in creative workloads, simulations, and heavy compute tasks. Its unlocked design with automatic overclocking and extensive PCIe 4.0 lanes make it a future-ready powerhouse, ideal for high-end workstations that refuse to compromise on speed or efficiency.







| ASIN | B0815JJQQ8 |
| Batteries | 1 Lithium Ion batteries required. |
| Best Sellers Rank | #512 in Computer CPU Processors |
| Brand | AMD |
| Customer Reviews | 4.0 4.0 out of 5 stars (255) |
| Date First Available | November 25, 2019 |
| Department | unisex-adult |
| Is Discontinued By Manufacturer | No |
| Item Dimensions LxWxH | 3.07 x 2.2 x 0.3 inches |
| Item Weight | 1.7 pounds |
| Item model number | AMD Ryzen Threadripper 3970X |
| Language | English, English, English, English, English |
| Manufacturer | AMD |
| Number of Processors | 32 |
| Processor | 4.5 GHz ryzen_threadripper_3970x |
| Processor Brand | AMD |
| Product Dimensions | 3.07 x 2.2 x 0.3 inches |
| Series | AMD Ryzen Threadripper 3970X |
A**N
Formidable!
I currently use this processor for Rosetta@home protein structure simulation, running at 100% utilization, 24/7. It sits in a Gigabyte TRX40 Designare along with 128GB of G.Skill Ripjaws 3600-CL16 , cooled by a Noctua NH-U14S TR4-SP3 , and powered by a Seasonic 850W Platinum power supply . I dropped in a Samsung 970 EVO 500GB NVMe with dual boot for Windows and Linux Mint. I enabled XMP and had Ryzen Master do an AutoOverclock with PBO +200 (the only reason for the Windows installation). Other than that, I always run the system in Linux Mint for increased stability and increased processing performance. I could forgo Windows and Ryzen Master but I didn't want to spend the time figuring out Gigabytes convoluted BIOS. I am no longer a seasoned overclocker. Having followed CPUs closely over the past 20 years, AMD has been really impressive over the last year! The Ryzens' ability to shift workloads around from core to core on the fly is impressive! Lets say you are running a 4-core task at 100%. As the 4 individual CPU cores heat up, eventually they will throttle back the boost to keep cool. But, before that happens, the Ryzen just instantly switches the tasks to 4 other cores! The result is that you can keep your 4 core task in boost the entire time. That is what amazingly allows the 3950x and 3970x to do so well in single thread tasks and gaming performance. Taking a look at dozens of benchmarks and reviews, the AMD 3950x is the perfect gaming CPU and the next logical step up, the 3970x trades a slight amount of gaming performance with massive amounts of multi-threading performance. I am fortunate enough to be able to afford both so my gaming/work computer is the 3950x and I have essentially donated the 3970x to COVID-19 research on Rosetta@home. If Rosetta ever runs out of work, it will then be donated to Folding@home.
R**N
A beast of a CPU if you do heavy multitasking or write multithreaded programs
The monster has been unleashed and will rip through multitasking or heavily multithreaded programs with the greatest of ease! I've mostly used this CPU for automating routines that would otherwise take much longer on other CPUs with fewer cores. With all 64 hardware threads in use, I'm seeing 3.8 GHz clock speeds though that increases to 4.2 GHz with one thread in use based on default settings. (I know I could push that a little more if I wanted.) Threads past 32 seem to be 1/4 as fast so using all 64 threads versus 32 yields a 25% net speed increase. Still, with all 64 threads in use, what would normally take an hour on a typical quad-core CPU will be done in about 8-9 minutes on this beast! The stability has been solid. I've never experienced any slow down issues, crashes, blue screens, or anything. I haven't gotten into overclocking much, but I've been using Ryzen Master to monitor temps and clock speeds and have considered overclocking for some tasks. If you're into gaming, this isn't quite the best CPU to get, unless you're wanting to stream your game play as well where the extra cores will allow for faster, higher quality encoding without affecting the game's frame rate. Installing the CPU was rather interesting. It comes with a piece attached on the sides that sticks out meant for holding it so that you don't touch the CPU itself at all. You basically just align it with the CPU slide-in opening on the motherboard and gently slide it down then secure it with the included specialty torque screwdriver that will let you know when you get to 13.5 in-lbs of torque as it will click. Do note that this CPU does not come with a cooler. For as much power as it draws and as much cooling as it'll need, I strongly recommend a liquid cooling setup. An applicable heat sink fan setup is just going to be much too bulky and cause problems with future upgrades. The 3970X requires a lot of power. With my system idling, I see that my UPS is reporting about 160-180 watts of power usage (30W from display excluded). With this CPU under full load doing just number crunching with all 64 threads in use, I see it jump to about 400-430W. If you get a single high end video card to go with it, that'll increase still more. You'll definitely want at least a 750W PSU at bare minimum, preferably 850W to 1000W. The main weak point, of course, is the price. However, for what this CPU can do and how much processing power it has, it's well worth the cost if you're the type that does heavy multitasking or use heavily multithreaded programs a lot.
Z**S
Die CPU wurde schnell und gut Verpack geliefert. Es ist schon ein echt massives Teil. Was mir sehr gut gefallen hat das ein Imbusschlüssel mitgeliefert wurde der die Montage im Sockel vereinfacht in dem er auf richtige Drehmoment begrenzt. Generell wirkt die CPU und das Zubehör sehr hochwertig. Aber bei dem Preis erwartet man sowas. Performance und Leistung: Der Umstieg von einem Intel 3820 (4 Cores @ 3,6Ghz) zu diesem "Monster" brachte einen tatsächlichen WOW Effekt. (wie HDD--> SSD) Gerade für div. Anwendungen wie etwa Unreal Engine 4.XX brachte einen extremen Boost. Was früher 1 Minute gedauert hat ist jetzt in 4 Sek erledigt. Das spart am Tag Stunden an Wartezeit ein !!! Spiele Performance: Hier ist wie erwartet der Performance Zuwachs ausgeblieben. Meine RTX 2070 Super brachte ca. 20-30% mehr Performance im Vergleich zu meinem alten 3820er. Spiele profitieren nur in seltenen fällen von den vielen Cores. Wer also NUR zocken will sollte da eher zu einer günstigeren CPU greifen. Strom und Verbrauch: die angegebenen 280 Watt habe ich noch nicht gesehen (max. 235 Watt) aber ich hab auch nicht übertaktet. Was mir massiv aufgefallen ist, das die CPU extrem schnell heiß wird von 40 auf 75 Grad in wenigen Sekunden. Das liegt wohl daran das so viele Cores gleichzeitig viel Wärme produzieren. Ich habe diesmal nicht auf eine AIO (Wasserkühlung) von Corsair sondern auf eine von Deepcool mit einem 360er Radiator gesetzt und die ist unter vollast schon richtig im Stress. Empfehlung: Bei Wasserkühlung/AIO mindestens 1 360er Radiator und nicht weniger. Nicht falsch verstehen, die AIO macht einen super Job um man merkt die Leistung wenn es oben wie aus einem Heizlüfter herausbläst, das ist abartig. Bitte die 280 Watt Abwärme nicht unterschätzen, wer ein kleines Zimmer ohne Klimaanlage hat wird im Sommer stark ins schwitzen kommen! Es ist eine Sache die Wärme von der CPU weg zu bekommen, aber aus dem Zimmer wieder eine andere. FAZIT: Für einen reinen Gaming PC ist das Geld 1000-mal besser ein einer 2. oder 3. Grafikkarte investiert. Diese CPU ist nur dann sinnvoll wenn man die entsprechenden Anwendungen dafür nutzt, dann macht sie aber einen großartigen Job. Wem es das Geld Wert ist und die richtigen Anwendungen hat sollte zugreifen.
C**N
Je l'utilise principalement pour la création 3D. J'avais un Ryzen 9 5900x 12 coeurs, et j'avais des doutes pour celui ci parce que ça me faisait repasser sur du zen 2 (les Ryzen 5000 c'est du zen 3, du coup gravure plus fine etc...). Pour le coup, un rendu qui me prenais 40 min à faire, ne m'en prend plus que 15min. Bon j'ai aussi level up la carte graphique legerement, mais quand même je pense que la difference est plus que visible. Après ça reste un peu cher quand même. Je l'ai essayé sur des jeux vidéos aussi pour voir si les 32 coeurs en font bugger certains. Tout est fluide et passe niquel, pas besoin de "mode jeux".
Z**6
Simply the best CPU I have ever owned! I replaced all my Intel boxes at home by Amd and not looking back!
C**K
only thing is be careful when mounting this on the board, as a slight shift may cause MB errrors and no boot, just remount and you are done, get QVL memory too, pricing on amazon for this is amazing!
H**R
Important note for any user of this cpu: You have to use AMD Ryzen Master to set the CPU up for the right tasks. If youre in creator mode, there are massive FPS drops in games, due to driver issues with Nvidia atm. You have to use Game Mode for that. See the pictures how it effects the performance. (3D Mark Benchmarks in Game and Creator Mode) Since games only use up to 8 cores anyway, this is a minor issue. Just a klick and a restart. Beside that, this CPU is a MONSTER. Codename: Starship Nothing more to say.
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