PBO2 in AMD, Performance and Comparison in the Ryzen 9 5900X

PBO2 in AMD, Performance and Comparison in the Ryzen 9 5900X

There is no doubt that AMD has broken into the so-called PC gaming market in a notorious way, a sector that until now was dominated by Intel and that as such, seemed not to be in danger. But AMD with its new Ryzen 5000 seems to have been up to par, or perhaps above if we take into account features such as the so-called second generation Precision Boost Overdrive or PBO2. Is it worth activating it? Will we get more performance?

CPU performance has been stagnant for quite some time, but thanks to AMD’s drive and competitiveness, we can now enjoy a golden age of innovation and performance that pushes processors to new heights. Technologies like PBO2 are nothing more than an attempt to push everything a bit beyond the stock limit to gain extra performance. Logically we are going to measure said gain outside of theory, in practice, to see if it is really worth it or if instead it is better to leave everything as it was.

Index

  • Characteristics and technical specifications
  • Synthetic tests
  • 1080p games
  • 2K games
  • 4K Games
  • Thermal performance
  • Memory performance
  • Consumption and overclock
  • Conclution

Characteristics and technical specifications

Ryzen 9 5900X

AMD Ryzen 9 5900X
Architecture Zen 3
Segment Mainstream
Socket AM4
Die 2 x CCD
Nuclei 12
Threads 24
Transistors A stranger
L1 cache 64 Kb per core
L2 cache 512 Kb per core
L3 cache 64 MB shared
Base frequency 3.7 GHz
Turbo frequency Up to 4.8 GHz
TDP 105 watts
Lithography 7 nm
Maximum temperature 95 degrees celsius
Serial heatsink Not
RAM Up to DDR4-3200 MHz without OC
Memory configuration Dual Channel
PCIe 4.0
Integrated graphics Not
IGPU frequency Not
Launch November 5, 2020
Overclock Yes, unlocked

As we can see, with this CPU we are facing a processor with 12 cores and 24 threads at a maximum frequency of 4.8 GHz. As we know, due to the algorithms used by AMD, this frequency could occur in one or more cores, but this depends on the consumption, temperature and energy consumed in a triangle that always makes the CPU below the figures announced by AMD.

This results in that temperatures will always be the determining factor and more or less stable, so the frequency will vary depending on the range of the first. Cooler means more frequency, although the reality is that we should be talking about higher cooling capacity to be correct.

The importance of temperature for PBO2

Why? Well, because the better cooling system we are not going to get a lower temperature, but a similar temperature or perhaps something higher, but a higher frequency without touching anything. That is, at the same settings with LN2 we would get higher frequency than with an air heatsink, much more, always up to the limit figure that AMD marks as the frequency in Boost.

Therefore, activating PBO2 is interesting, since it removes part of the limitations of the CPU and allows higher voltage, higher range of consumed watts and therefore higher frequency. That said, we are going to know the results with two different samples, with PBO Off (fully serial CPU) and PBO On. As always, our AMD test team consists of:

Synthetic tests

5900X-CBR155900X-CBR205900X-CBR235900X-corona-cpu5900X-CPUZ-cpu5900X-time-spy

1080p games

5900X-Anno-1800-1080p5900X-BFV-1080p5900X-SOTTR-1080p

2K games

5900X-Anno-1800-2k5900X-BFV-2k5900X-SOTTR-2k

4K Games

5900X-Anno-1800-4k5900X-BFV-4k5900X-SOTTR-4k

CPI without PBO2

5900X-IPC-cpu

This is one of those sections that should be seen, because although we have not logically activated PBO2 to compare the IPC, it is perfectly clear that today AMD achieves a higher performance per cycle than Intel. And it is that these after three generations of CPUs and two architectures have not increased their performance too much, but instead they have managed to boost the frequency, which in stock CPUs makes the difference.

Memory performance

5900X-aida64-ram

The memory performance is a bit controversial, since with PBO2 active it achieves a worse result than deactivated, which is curious. It may be that the performance is almost identical, since it is within the margin of error, but no matter how many times we have passed this test in different software configurations, the result has always been the same.

5900X-Aida-64-Memoria

In the bandwidth we could speak of a technical tie, mainly because although the CPU gets more frequency the IMC is not affected by much that the performance of the caches also increases somewhat, not in proportion logically. There is not much debate here.

Frequency, consumption and overclock

5900X-consumo-cpu

Where there is debate is precisely in the consumption, since although the frequency rises as seen below, the performance in gaming is practically the same, the performance with a single thread generally worsens and in multi-thread it is true that it is let notice.

The rise is 39 watts and the temperature rose almost 4 degrees, which taking into account that we start from a CORSAIR H150i Capellix, it is a more than interesting rise that is only recommended for those who need all the power of the cores.

For gaming it has been shown that as standard it is more than enough and we will get better temperatures.

5900X-frecuencia-cpu

Conclusion on PBO2

amd_ryzen_5000_series_zen_3

AMD Precision Boost Overdrive 2 is a more than interesting technology, with great potential, that works well and achieves higher performance in our CPU with a single click. But having said that, it is not for all audiences if we stop to look at the data carefully.

With an increase of 39 watts over original consumption and a total figure of 180 watts, this is not an easy number to work with for heatsinks or AIOs. We are talking about temperatures above 75 degrees with systems of almost 200 euros, so it is not a characteristic for all audiences mainly because very few spend the necessary amount of money in a refrigeration of such caliber.

PBO2 is intended more for custom liquid cooling users, who can cool that amount of heat and even more, where the best systems will manage to keep over 250 watts below 80 degrees.

As for the performance itself, its use for gaming is certainly discouraged, since it hardly contributes anything except a few cases counted at 1080p and in highly optimized engines such as BFV. Even so, you have to take the temperatures into account and take a good look at them.

For those who have achieved a top or at least very decent cooling system and need every last drop of performance in all threads, PBO2 is a highly recommended alternative since it supposes that, a boost to the CPU than in its 24 threads. yes it is noticed.

For the rest of the cases, the stock CPU is the most recommended if what we have is a mix between gaming, professional and casual, since unless we can control the temperature in terms of efficiency and performance it does not compensate.