AMD Ryzen Threadripper 9980X

AMD Ryzen Threadripper 9980X

AMD Ryzen Threadripper 9980X: 64-Core Zen 5 HEDT Flagship

Ryzen Threadripper 9980X is the top enthusiast-class (HEDT) processor of the Threadripper 9000 family for the sTR5/TRX50 platform. It targets intensive multi-threaded workloads and builds with multiple accelerators and ultra-fast storage. Key points: 64 cores/128 threads on the Zen 5 microarchitecture, no integrated graphics, modern I/O, and quad-channel DDR5 RDIMM support.

Key Specifications

• Architecture/codename: Zen 5, HEDT generation “Shimada Peak”; chiplet design (CCDs on 4-nm, IOD on 6-nm).
• Cores/threads: 64/128.
• Clocks: base 3.2 GHz; maximum boost up to 5.4 GHz (depends on power/thermals and cooling).
• L3 cache: 256 MB (32 MB per CCD, aggregate).
• Power envelope: 350 W TDP; cTDP range depends on motherboard policy and BIOS profiles (vendors typically offer multiple power levels).
• Integrated graphics: none (a discrete GPU is required for display output).
• Memory: quad-channel DDR5 RDIMM with ECC; typical supported profiles up to DDR5-6400 JEDEC; large RAM capacities for data-heavy workflows.
• Interfaces: up to 80 PCIe 5.0 lanes from the CPU; additional PCIe 4.0 lanes and peripherals via the TRX50 chipset; USB4/Thunderbolt (up to 40 Gbps) availability depends on the board’s controller; display outputs only via a discrete GPU.
• NPU/Ryzen AI: not present; on-device AI relies on CPU (AVX-512, BF16/FP16 in supporting software) and/or discrete GPUs/AI accelerators.
• Benchmarks: not provided (per requirements).

What This Chip Is and Where It Fits

Threadripper 9980X continues the HEDT philosophy: a “desktop workstation” positioned between mainstream AM5 and professional Threadripper PRO (WRX90). The core use cases are rendering, compilation of large projects, clustered task emulation, high-resolution video processing, CAD/CAE, scientific computing, and mixed pipelines with multiple GPUs. Form factors include full-tower workstations and ATX/CEB/E-ATX systems on TRX50; rackmount or studio nodes are also encountered.

Architecture and Process

In the 9980X, the Zen 5 microarchitecture combines multiple compute chiplets (CCDs) with a separate I/O die (IOD). CCDs are fabricated on an enhanced TSMC 4-nm node (N4P), while the IOD uses 6-nm. The chiplet approach scales cores and cache and helps distribute heat more effectively.

Zen 5 improvements span the front-end, branch prediction, and vector units, lifting IPC—especially in codecs, compilation, math libraries, and multimedia filters. Full AVX-512 support accelerates CPU-based rendering, simulations, and some AI algorithms. L2 cache is 1 MB per core (64 MB total), with 256 MB of L3.

The memory subsystem is quad-channel DDR5 RDIMM with ECC. Quad channeling raises sustained bandwidth and scales better for streaming workloads than dual-channel designs. Typical boards support profiles up to DDR5-6400 (JEDEC) and large capacities—256–512 GB and beyond are common for workstations.

Hardware video encode/decode blocks are not a focal point for HEDT CPUs; accelerated encoding/decoding is usually handled by discrete graphics. The processor delivers the compute side for filters and content preparation.

CPU Performance

The 9980X targets workloads that scale with cores: CPU renderers, physics simulations, CPU ray tracing, compilation (GCC/Clang/MSBuild in highly parallel modes), large archivers, analytics pipelines, and scripting environments capable of efficient parallelization. Sixty-four cores provide strong throughput, while higher boost ceilings help in moderately parallel phases.

Final performance depends on TDP/cTDP settings and cooling efficiency. Under sustained load, stable “under-the-line” clocks matter more than momentary peaks. Systems with robust liquid cooling (360/420-mm AIOs or custom loops) and well-ventilated chassis deliver more consistent results in long runs and real projects.

Graphics and Multimedia (iGPU)

There is no integrated GPU. Display output and hardware video codecs come from discrete graphics. Workstations typically use professional accelerators (with DCC/CAE certifications) or high-end gaming cards, depending on software. 1080p editing/preview performance hinges on the GPU and on memory/storage subsystems rather than on the CPU. Pure CPU codecs are possible but are usually more power-efficient on the GPU.

AI/NPU

No on-die NPU is present. On-device AI relies on CPU vector extensions (AVX-512/BF16/FP16 where frameworks support them) and, in most scenarios, on discrete GPU/AI cards (CUDA/ROCm, DirectML). The absence of an NPU does not preclude inference or small-to-mid-sized model tuning; the limiting factors become the chosen accelerator, its memory capacity/bandwidth, and the storage subsystem for datasets.

Platform and I/O

The sTR5/TRX50 platform exposes up to 80 PCIe 5.0 lanes directly from the CPU—enough for multiple x16 GPUs, PCIe 5.0 NVMe drives, and I/O cards. Additional lanes and ports come via the chipset (PCIe 4.0, SATA, networking). Board-specific layouts vary; many offer three to four full-speed x16 slots and 3–4 M.2 sockets (some at PCIe 5.0 x4).

USB4/Thunderbolt up to 40 Gbps is provided by onboard controllers or add-in PCIe cards (availability and port count vary by board). With no iGPU, display connectors are located on the graphics card; the number of displays depends on the GPU.

Networking on TRX50 motherboards typically includes 2.5/10-GbE; systems for video production or file serving often add 25–100-Gbps adapters via PCIe 4.0/5.0.

Power and Cooling

A 350 W TDP imposes strict requirements for cooling and power delivery. Sustained full-load operation calls for 360/420-mm liquid coolers or top-tier dual-tower air coolers with high static pressure and a well-planned case airflow. TRX50 boards use robust VRM stages, but during prolonged renders/compiles, directed airflow over VRM heatsinks and memory is important.

cTDP ranges and BIOS power profiles tailor behavior to specific tasks: power limits reduce performance but also lower noise/temperatures; aggressive profiles raise sustained clocks but demand stronger cooling and PSUs. Peak platform draw with multiple GPUs may require 1200–1600 W (or more) power supplies.

Where You’ll Find It

The 9980X appears in enthusiast workstations, creator rigs, render-farm nodes, and engineering PCs. It is available from system integrators and for DIY builds on TRX50 motherboards from multiple vendors.

Positioning and Comparison

Within the 9000X HEDT stack, this processor sits at the top. Below it are the 9970X (32C/64T) and 9960X (24C/48T), sharing the same platform and power envelope. Differences involve the number of compute chiplets, total L3 cache, base/boost frequencies, and board-level lane/slot distribution (the latter is motherboard-specific). Versus the professional Threadripper PRO 9000 WX line, the 9980X provides an HEDT configuration with quad-channel memory and 80 PCIe 5.0 lanes, while the PRO platform targets eight-channel memory and up to 128 PCIe 5.0 lanes for specialized workstations.

Who It Suits

• Post-production, CPU render engines, offline ray tracing.
• Building and testing large software projects; desktop CI servers.
• Scientific/engineering compute, modeling, data processing, ETL pipelines.
• Multi-camera/multi-stream video workflows with multiple GPUs and fast SSD scratch.
• Inference and model preparation centered on discrete accelerators, with a strong CPU for orchestration.

Pros and Cons

Pros

  1. 64 cores/128 threads and large L3 cache—excellent multi-thread headroom.

  2. Up to 80 PCIe 5.0 lanes—flexible multi-GPU/SSD configurations.

  3. Full AVX-512 support—faster renders, simulations, and compute libraries.

  4. Quad-channel DDR5 RDIMM with ECC—high stability and memory bandwidth.

  5. Compatibility with the TRX50 ecosystem and feature-rich enthusiast motherboards.

Cons

  1. High 350 W TDP—demanding cooling and acoustics.

  2. No iGPU—requires a discrete graphics card even for basic display.

  3. Peak platform draw with multiple GPUs—tighter PSU and power-delivery requirements.

  4. Lower cost efficiency in workloads that don’t scale well with threads.

  5. Size and heat output limit case and workspace options.

Configuration Recommendations

Memory. For true quad-channel operation, populate at least four RDIMM ECC modules. Balance capacity and speed: favor capacity (e.g., 8×32 GB or 8×64 GB) for large scenes/projects; for mid-sized compile/render pipelines, DDR5-6000/6400 (JEDEC/vendor profiles) is a good target.

Storage. One PCIe 4.0/5.0 SSD for the OS; a separate high-speed NVMe for cache/scratch (editing/simulation); a multi-SSD array for parallel write workloads. Use SATA/SAS expansion or external NAS (10/25/40 Gbps) for archives.

Cooling. A 360/420-mm AIO or an equivalent dual-tower air cooler with high static pressure. Ensure airflow over VRM and memory; implement a front-to-back tunnel with dust filters and fan curves tied to VRM/CPU sensors.

Power. Choose a PSU with headroom and adequate 12VHPWR/8-pin connectors for GPUs. For multi-GPU rigs, 1200–1600 W (or more) with at least 80 PLUS Gold/Platinum certification is advisable.

BIOS Profiles. Tune PBO/Curve Optimizer and power limits to match the chassis/cooling capability. For long renders, prefer profiles that deliver a stable frequency “plateau” at acceptable noise.

Networking. For collaborative media work, consider 10–25 Gbps Ethernet (or higher) and appropriate switching; segment render traffic with dedicated VLANs in distributed setups.

Final Verdict

Ryzen Threadripper 9980X crowns the HEDT segment with extreme multi-thread performance and expansive PCIe 5.0 connectivity. It shines in builds leveraging multiple GPUs, very large in-memory datasets, and high-speed NVMe arrays. It is the right choice when compute time and multi-accelerator flexibility outweigh power efficiency and compactness. Where price-performance or tight thermal/form-factor limits take priority, consider the lower 9000X HEDT models—or step up to Threadripper PRO for workloads with extreme memory and PCIe requirements.

Basic

Label Name
AMD
Platform
Desktop
Model Name
?
The Intel processor number is just one of several factors - along with processor brand, system configurations, and system-level benchmarks - to be considered when choosing the right processor for your computing needs.
Ryzen Threadripper 9980X
Code Name
Shimada Peak
Generation
Zen 5

CPU Specifications

Total Cores
?
Cores is a hardware term that describes the number of independent central processing units in a single computing component (die or chip).
64
Total Threads
?
Where applicable, Intel® Hyper-Threading Technology is only available on Performance-cores.
128
Basic Frequency
3.2 GHz
Max Turbo Frequency
?
Max Turbo Frequency is the maximum single-core frequency at which the processor is capable of operating using Intel® Turbo Boost Technology and, if present, Intel® Turbo Boost Max Technology 3.0 and Intel® Thermal Velocity Boost. Frequency is typically measured in gigahertz (GHz), or billion cycles per second.
Up to 5.4 GHz
L1 Cache
5120 KB
L2 Cache
64 MB
L3 Cache
256 MB
CPU Socket
?
The socket is the component that provides the mechanical and electrical connections between the processor and motherboard.
sTR5
Unlocked for Overclocking
?
AMD`s product warranty does not cover damages caused by overclocking, even when overclocking is enabled via AMD hardware and/or software. GD-26.
Yes
Technology
?
Lithography refers to the semiconductor technology used to manufacture an integrated circuit, and is reported in nanometer (nm), indicative of the size of features built on the semiconductor.
TSMC 4nm FinFET
TDP
350W
Max. Operating Temperature
?
Junction Temperature is the maximum temperature allowed at the processor die.
95°C
PCI Express Version
?
PCI Express Revision is the supported version of the PCI Express standard. Peripheral Component Interconnect Express (or PCIe) is a high-speed serial computer expansion bus standard for attaching hardware devices to a computer. The different PCI Express versions support different data rates.
PCIe® 5.0
Instruction Set
?
The instruction set is a hard program stored inside the CPU that guides and optimizes CPU operations. With these instruction sets, the CPU can run more efficiently. There are many manufacturers that design CPUs, which results in different instruction sets, such as the 8086 instruction set for the Intel camp and the RISC instruction set for the ARM camp. x86, ARM v8, and MIPS are all codes for instruction sets. Instruction sets can be extended; for example, x86 added 64-bit support to create x86-64. Manufacturers developing CPUs that are compatible with a certain instruction set need authorization from the instruction set patent holder. A typical example is Intel authorizing AMD, enabling the latter to develop CPUs compatible with the x86 instruction set.
x86-64

Memory Specifications

Memory Type
?
Intel® processors come in four different types: Single Channel, Dual Channel, Triple Channel, and Flex Mode. Maximum supported memory speed may be lower when populating multiple DIMMs per channel on products that support multiple memory channels.
DDR5
Memory Channels
?
The number of memory channels refers to the bandwidth operation for real world application.
4
Bus Speed
Up to 6400 MT/s
ECC Memory Support
Yes (Default Enabled)

GPU Specifications

Integrated Graphics Model
?
An integrated GPU refers to the graphics core that is integrated into the CPU processor. Leveraging the processor's powerful computational capabilities and intelligent power efficiency management, it delivers outstanding graphics performance and a smooth application experience at a lower power consumption.
Discrete Graphics Card Required

Miscellaneous

Official Website
OS Support
Windows 11 - 64-Bit Edition, RHEL x86 64-Bit, Ubuntu x86 64-Bit, Windows 10 - 64-Bit Edition

Benchmarks

Geekbench 6
Single Core Score
3259
Geekbench 6
Multi Core Score
28666
Passmark CPU
Single Core Score
4594
Passmark CPU
Multi Core Score
147481

Compared to Other CPU

Geekbench 6 Single Core
4224 +29.6%
2852 -12.5%
2722 -16.5%
2638 -19.1%
Geekbench 6 Multi Core
18372 -35.9%
16510 -42.4%
Passmark CPU Single Core
5268 +14.7%
4636 +0.9%
4308 -6.2%
4191 -8.8%
Passmark CPU Multi Core
166328 +12.8%
71663 -51.4%
58797 -60.1%