The AMD Ryzen 5 130 is designed for both laptop and desktop platforms, built on a 6nm semiconductor process with a thermal design power of 28W and a maximum operating temperature of 95°C. It includes integrated graphics and fully supports 64-bit operation, making it a versatile general-purpose processor. Connectivity is handled through PCIe 4.0, enabling compatibility with modern expansion cards and storage devices.
The processor runs six cores at a base speed of 2.9 GHz with 12 threads and can boost up to a turbo clock of 4.55 GHz, using a clock multiplier of 29. It does not feature an unlocked multiplier or big.LITTLE heterogeneous core architecture. Cache memory is arranged across three levels: 512 KB of L1, 3 MB of L2 at 0.5 MB per core, and 16 MB of L3 cache at 2.67 MB per core, providing a reasonable hierarchy to help reduce memory latency during varied workloads.
The integrated graphics solution is the Radeon 660M, running at a base clock of 1500 MHz and capable of boosting up to 1900 MHz. It supports up to four displays simultaneously and is backed by 384 shading units, 24 texture mapping units, and 16 render output units. API support covers DirectX 12, OpenGL 4.6, and OpenCL 2.2, giving it a broad range of compatibility for general graphics and compute tasks.
The processor supports DDR5 memory across two channels, with a maximum supported speed of 4800 MHz and a peak memory bandwidth of 76.8 GB/s. It can address up to 64 GB of RAM in total, and notably includes support for ECC memory, which allows for error detection and correction during operation.
The processor supports multithreading and includes the NX bit for hardware-level memory protection against certain types of malicious code execution. Its instruction set support spans MMX, F16C, FMA3, AES, AVX, AVX2, SSE 4.1, and SSE 4.2, covering a wide range of operations from legacy multimedia extensions to modern floating-point, encryption, and vectorized computation workloads.