The AMD Ryzen 5 9600X underwent benchmarking in AIDA64, demonstrating a performance increase of approximately 80% compared to its predecessor. Additionally, the silicon was observed operating at 5.7 GHz, surpassing its advertised boost clock of 5.5 GHz.
AMD’s latest Ryzen 9000 series desktop processor has made an appearance before its scheduled July release. A test version of the Ryzen 5 9600X, designed for entry-level use, was evaluated online (via HXL on X) and demonstrated a significant improvement in performance.
An AIDA64 benchmark reveals that the Ryzen 5 9600X has L1 cache speeds of 3756.4/1884.8/3755.8 GB/s for read/write/copy operations. Additionally, the L2 cache demonstrates speeds of 1874.6/1795.1/1859.7 GB/s. This indicates a significant performance boost of approximately 80% compared to the previous generation Ryzen 5 7600X, which is currently priced at.
The Ryzen 5 9600X achieved scores of 775.9 and 6,201.3 in CPU-Z’s single and multi-threaded benchmarks at 5.0 GHz. These results fall short of the CPU’s advertised boost clock of 5.5 GHz. When the silicon was overclocked to 5.7 GHz, it obtained scores of 871.4 and 7096.6 points in the same test.
Please be aware that the Ryzen 5 9600X being discussed is a pre-production model and may not meet performance specifications. Despite this, the early indications are positive, suggesting that the CPU could potentially lead the mid-range market, at least until Intel’s Arrow Lake processors are released.
AMD Ryzen 5 9600X overclocked CPU-Z benchmark (image via HXL)
AMD Ryzen 5 9600X AIDA64 and CPU-Z benchmark (image via HXL)