The AMD EPYC 9755 128-core Zen 5 server processor has been benchmarked a lot at Phoronix since the EPYC 9005 “Turin” launch as their top-end Zen 5 server processor with “full fat” cores compared to the denser Zen 5C cores that extend up to the EPYC 9965 at 192 cores. For those eyeing the 128 core per socket sweet spot, there is also the EPYC 9745 that is made up of 128 Zen 5C cores that allows for a 400 Watt TDP compared to the 500 Watt EPYC 9755. Today’s benchmarking is comparing the EPYC 9745 and EPYC 9755 performance and power difference.
For those on an AMD EPYC 9005 series server platform where the motherboard can only accommodate up to 400 Watt TDP CPUs rather than 500 Watt, or you are very focused on power/thermals, the EPYC 9745 is an interesting option for squeezing in 128 Zen 5C cores at a 400 Watt TDP. Via custom TDP (cTDP) tuning is even the ability to lower that down to 320 Watts for even lower power/thermal requirements.
Compared to the EPYC 9755 that is 128 Zen 5 cores with a 2.1GHz base clock, 4.1GHz all-core boost speed / max boost clock, and 512MB L3 cache, the EPYC 9745 is slightly reduced due to the Zen 5C cores and the 100 Watt lower TDP. The EPYC 9745 has a 2.4GHz base clock, 3.45GHz all core boost speed, and 3.7GHz maximum boost clock. With Zen 5C cores, the EPYC 9745 also has just half the L3 cache (256MB) as the EPYC 9755. But you have the same 128 cores / 256 threads and the same ISA with AVX-512 and the like while having a 400 Watt TDP or as low as 320 Watt cTDP.
At 320 Watt, the EPYC 9745 at its lowest cTDP isn’t too far off from the AmpereOne A128-34X 128-core processor with a 275 Watt rated usage power. With that AmpereOne A128-32X at 275 Watts, that is clocking up to 3.4GHz compared to the EPYC 9745 hitting up to 3.7GHz. Unfortunately, I don’t have any AmpereOne processors on-hand for comparison.
Current pricing at major Internet retailers have both the EPYC 9745 and EPYC 9755 listed for about $7200 USD. With similar pricing, the EPYC 9745 really comes down to those that are limited to a 400 Watt TDP limit of their platform and/or really trying to optimize on energy efficiency and lower thermal/power requirements.
In being curious about the 128 core Zen 5 vs. 128 core Zen 5C for performance and power, I benchmarked the following configurations using the Gigabyte MZ33-AR1 server:
– AMD EPYC 9755 (128 cores, Zen 5, 500 Watt TDP)
– AMD EPYC 9745 (128 cores, Zen 5C, 400 Watt TDP)
– AMD EPYC 9745 (128 cores, Zen 5C, 320 Watt cTDP)
With this single socket Gigabyte AMD EPYC 9005 server platform. This server was built around the SilverStone RM4A with SilverStone XE360-SP5 liquid cooling.
From there more than 500 benchmarks were run on this Gigabyte MZ33-AR1 server build in comparing the 128-core EPYC Turin server performance between the EPYC 9745 with 128 dense cores and the EPYC 9755 with its 128 full-fat cores for looking at the performance as well as CPU power consumption based on the PowerCap/RAPL interface and then also the total DC power consumption as exposed via the USB interface on the Corsair HX1500i power supply.
