EPYC 7642 vs Turion II Ultra M600

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Aggregate performance score

Turion II Ultra M600
2009
2 cores / 2 threads, 35 Watt
0.52
EPYC 7642
2019, $4,775
48 cores / 96 threads, 225 Watt
33.64
+6369%

EPYC 7642 outperforms Turion II Ultra M600 by a whopping 6369% based on our aggregate benchmark results.

Primary details

Comparing processor market type (desktop or notebook), architecture, sales start time and price.

Place in the ranking3111133
Place by popularitynot in top-100not in top-100
Cost-effectiveness evaluationno data5.08
Market segmentLaptopServer
SeriesAMD Turion II UltraAMD EPYC
Power efficiency0.636.36
DesignerAMDAMD
Manufacturerno dataTSMC
Architecture codenameCaspian (2009)Zen 2 (2017−2020)
Release date10 September 2009 (16 years ago)7 August 2019 (6 years ago)
Launch price (MSRP)no data$4,775

Cost-effectiveness evaluation

Performance per price, higher is better.

no data

Performance to price scatter graph

Detailed specifications

Turion II Ultra M600 and EPYC 7642 basic parameters such as number of cores, number of threads, base frequency and turbo boost clock, lithography, cache size and multiplier lock state. These parameters indirectly say of CPU speed, though for more precise assessment you have to consider their test results.

Physical cores2 (Dual-core)48 (Octatetraconta-Core)
Threads296
Base clock speedno data2.4 GHz
Boost clock speed2.4 GHz3.4 GHz
Bus rate3600 MHzno data
Multiplierno data23
L1 cacheno data96K (per core)
L2 cache2 MB512K (per core)
L3 cacheno data256 MB (shared)
Chip lithography45 nm7 nm, 14 nm
Die sizeno data192 mm2
Number of transistorsno data4,800 million
64 bit support++
Windows 11 compatibility-+
Unlocked multiplier-+

Compatibility

Information on Turion II Ultra M600 and EPYC 7642 compatibility with other computer components: motherboard (look for socket type), power supply unit (look for power consumption) etc. Useful when planning a future computer configuration or upgrading an existing one. Note that power consumption of some processors can well exceed their nominal TDP, even without overclocking. Some can even double their declared thermals given that the motherboard allows to tune the CPU power parameters.

Number of CPUs in a configurationno data2 (Multiprocessor)
SocketSocket S1 (s1g3) 638-pinTR4
Power consumption (TDP)35 Watt225 Watt

Technologies and extensions

Technological solutions and additional instructions supported by Turion II Ultra M600 and EPYC 7642. You'll probably need this information if you require some particular technology.

Instruction set extensionsMMX, SSE, SSE2, SSE3, Enhanced 3DNow!, NX bit, AMD64, PowerNow!, AMD Virtualizationno data
AES-NI-+
AVX-+
PowerNow+-
Precision Boost 2no data+

Virtualization technologies

Virtual machine speed-up technologies supported by Turion II Ultra M600 and EPYC 7642 are enumerated here.

AMD-V-+

Memory specs

Types, maximum amount and channel quantity of RAM supported by Turion II Ultra M600 and EPYC 7642. Depending on the motherboard, higher memory frequencies may be supported.

Supported memory typesno dataDDR4 Eight-channel
Maximum memory sizeno data4 TiB
Max memory channelsno data8
Maximum memory bandwidthno data204.763 GB/s
ECC memory support-+

Synthetic benchmarks

Various benchmark results of the processors in comparison. Overall score is measured in points in 0-100 range, higher is better.


Combined synthetic benchmark score

This is our combined benchmark performance rating.

Turion II Ultra M600 0.52
EPYC 7642 33.64
+6369%

Passmark

Passmark CPU Mark is a widespread benchmark, consisting of 8 different types of workload, including integer and floating point math, extended instructions, compression, encryption and physics calculation. There is also one separate single-threaded scenario measuring single-core performance. Other than that, Passmark measures multi-core performance.

Turion II Ultra M600 923
EPYC 7642 59333
+6328%
Samples: 16

GeekBench 5 Single-Core

GeekBench 5 Single-Core is a cross-platform application developed in the form of CPU tests that independently recreate certain real-world tasks with which to accurately measure performance. This version uses only a single CPU core.

Turion II Ultra M600 292
EPYC 7642 1211
+315%

GeekBench 5 Multi-Core

GeekBench 5 Multi-Core is a cross-platform application developed in the form of CPU tests that independently recreate certain real-world tasks with which to accurately measure performance. This version uses all available CPU cores.

Turion II Ultra M600 510
EPYC 7642 10317
+1923%

Gaming performance

Pros & cons summary


Performance score 0.52 33.64
Recency 10 September 2009 7 August 2019
Physical cores 2 48
Threads 2 96
Chip lithography 45 nm 7 nm
Power consumption (TDP) 35 Watt 225 Watt

Turion II Ultra M600 has 542.9% lower power consumption.

EPYC 7642, on the other hand, has a 6369.2% higher aggregate performance score, an age advantage of 9 years, 2300% more physical cores and 4700% more threads, and a 542.9% more advanced lithography process.

The AMD EPYC 7642 is our recommended choice as it beats the AMD Turion II Ultra M600 in performance tests.

Be aware that Turion II Ultra M600 is a notebook processor while EPYC 7642 is a server/workstation one.

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AMD Turion II Ultra M600
Turion II Ultra M600
AMD EPYC 7642
EPYC 7642

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Community ratings

Here you can see how users rate the processors, as well as rate them yourself.


4.6 16 votes

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4.6 11 votes

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