The AMD Ryzen 7 5705GE is a desktop processor built around the AM4 socket, offering broad motherboard compatibility across seven chipsets: X370, B350, X470, B450, X570, B550, and A520. It is fabricated on a 7 nm process node and carries a thermal design power of just 35W, with a maximum operating temperature of 95°C. The chip includes integrated graphics, supports 64-bit computing, and interfaces with the system via PCIe 3.0.
The processor features 8 cores running at 3.2 GHz, backed by 16 threads for handling parallel workloads, and can reach a turbo clock speed of 4.6 GHz when conditions allow. The clock multiplier is set at 32, and an unlocked multiplier provides additional headroom for manual frequency adjustments. Cache is distributed across three levels — 512 KB of L1, 4 MB of L2 at 0.5 MB per core, and 16 MB of L3 at 2 MB per core — supporting efficient data access across the core complex. The chip does not use big.LITTLE heterogeneous core architecture, meaning all cores operate under a uniform design.
The integrated graphics solution is the Radeon Vega 8, operating at a base clock of 300 MHz and scaling up to 2000 MHz in turbo mode. It includes 512 shading units, 32 texture mapping units, and 8 render output units, forming a reasonably complete fixed-function pipeline for display and light rendering tasks. On the API side, it supports DirectX 12, OpenGL 4.6, and OpenCL 2.1, covering both graphics and general-purpose compute workloads.
The processor supports DDR4 memory across two channels, allowing for dual-channel configurations to improve memory bandwidth utilization. Maximum supported RAM speed reaches 3200 MHz, and ECC memory is not supported by this processor.
The processor includes multithreading support and the NX bit for hardware-level memory protection against certain classes of malicious code execution. It also carries a broad set of instruction set extensions — MMX, F16C, FMA3, AES, AVX, AVX2, SSE 4.1, and SSE 4.2 — enabling optimized handling of tasks ranging from floating-point and vector operations to hardware-accelerated encryption.