The Ryzen Threadripper 1920X is a 12 core 24 thread CPU, currently second only to the 1950X (16 cores, 32 threads) in AMD’s latest Zen-based line for high end desktop processors. Get Yours 12 cores provide an astonishing 24 threads of simultaneous multi-processing power, while 38MB of combined cache and vast I/O from the enthusiast-grade AMD X399 platform stand ready to feed the beast. Otherwise, it would just stall at the startup screen.Enter the the $799-MSRP Ryzen Threadripper 1920X. - An unprecedented 64 PCIe Gen3 lanes to meet large GPU and NVMe needs. Clearly, though, if you're doing lots of video editing, crunching through things like 4K video in a time-sensitive professional environment, the Ryzen Threadripper 1950X may be worth paying an extra $200 for.Interestingly, the two Threadripper chips were effectively tied on the single-core test. And on the plus side (albeit superficially), the retail packaging is unusually interesting. We ran our two test games on both our Core X-Series testbed with the Core i9 chip, and our Threadripper testbed with the Threadripper 1920X. If your cooler is robust enough, both processors also enable a four-core 4.2 GHz XFR ceiling.AMD has an aggressive roadmap it'll use to improve the Zen architecture and transition to smaller nodes, so the company should remain a competitive force to be reckoned with. It has a base clock of 3.4GHz and tops out at the same 4GHz. Podle situace se automaticky přetaktuje na hezkých 4 GHz a na jistou dobu Even then, the upcoming 18-core Core i9-7980XE has a suggested price of $2,000, twice that of the top Threadripper chip. On thread-hungry tests and tasks, the Ryzen 7 1800X and Core i7-7700K won't stand a chance against the 32-thread Threadripper 1950X or the 24-thread Threadripper 1920X. Both results again bested the Core i9-7900X's 91fps on the same test. Not that this is a major issue, but it's tough to ignore in a brand-new platform when Intel's competing chips are far smaller and aren't as obviously separate modules paired together.To see how well the stepped-down Ryzen Threadripper 1920X handles gaming, we swapped that chip into our test bed and ran the same games that we used to test other recent processors. For serious Enthusiasts, Prosumers and Creators, AMD designed the new 2nd Gen Ryzen™ Threadripper™ 2920X. But as this is physically, by far, the biggest consumer processor in the last several years, existing coolers cover only the central portion of the chip. Compare this with the upcoming 18-core Intel Core i9-7980XE, which Intel has revealed will have a low 2.6GHz base clock. We've listed the parts below.Using the same settings as we used for the Threadripper 1950X (that is, setting the voltage at a rather high 1.325 volts, which was expressly suggested by AMD), we were able to get the Threadripper 1920X stable with all cores clocked at 4GHz, 500MHz above the 3.5GHz base clock.AMD provides a downloadable app, Ryzen Master, for system monitoring and overclocking, as well as toggling between AMD's so-called Creator and Game Modes, which we'll get into in a little bit.