The AMD Ryzen AI Max Plus 392 is designed for both desktop and laptop platforms, built on a 4nm semiconductor process that contributes to its efficiency within a 55W thermal design power envelope. It supports 64-bit computing and includes integrated graphics, while PCIe 4.0 connectivity is available for peripheral and expansion use. The processor has a maximum operating temperature of 100°C, keeping it within defined thermal limits across supported form factors.
The processor runs 12 cores at a base speed of 3.2GHz each, supporting 24 threads for handling concurrent tasks, with a turbo clock speed reaching up to 5GHz when workloads demand it. Cache is organized as 12MB of L2 and 64MB of L3 in total, translating to 1MB of L2 and 5.33MB of L3 per core, providing a solid buffer for data-intensive operations. The clock multiplier is set at 32, though the multiplier is locked, meaning manual overclocking is not supported. The chip does not use big.LITTLE heterogeneous core technology, so all cores share a uniform architecture.
The integrated Radeon 8060S GPU operates at a base clock of 1295MHz and can boost up to 2900MHz under turbo conditions, with support for up to four displays simultaneously. Its rendering pipeline consists of 2560 shading units, 160 texture mapping units, and 64 render output units, forming a reasonably capable integrated graphics configuration. API support covers DirectX 12, OpenGL 4.6, and OpenCL 2.1, making it compatible with a broad range of graphics and compute workloads.
This processor supports DDR5 memory, with a maximum rated speed of 8000MHz and a ceiling of 128GB for total installed RAM, offering substantial headroom for memory-intensive workloads and large datasets.
The processor supports a broad range of instruction sets including MMX, AVX, AVX2, FMA3, F16C, AES, SSE 4.1, and SSE 4.2, enabling compatibility with a wide variety of compute and multimedia workloads. Multithreading is supported, allowing the chip to handle multiple threads per core concurrently, and the NX bit is present to help enforce hardware-level memory protection against certain classes of malicious code execution.