Amdryzensilicontester.7z -
| Feature | Alleged Output | Plausibility | |---------|----------------|---------------| | | Similar to ASUS’s SP (Silicon Prediction) value. | High – these values are stored in SMU. | | Minimum stable voltage (Vmin) at given frequency | Reports each core’s FIT (Fused In Test) voltage. | Medium – requires extensive testing. | | Leakage current (Ileak) | High/low leakage classification. | Low – needs specialized equipment. | | Temperature sensor offset calibration | Shows sensor inaccuracies. | Possible via SMU commands. | | Fuse array dump | Lists factory-programmed fuses (speed grades, L3 cache defects). | Very low – fuse access is locked. |
The term "Silicon Lottery" refers to the natural manufacturing variance in semiconductor production. Two identical Ryzen 5800X processors, bought on the same day from the same store, will not perform identically. One might require 1.35V to hit 4.8GHz, while the other might do so at 1.30V. The latter is considered "better silicon" because it runs cooler and has more headroom for overclocking. AMDRyzenSiliconTester.7z
The .7z extension indicates the file is compressed using the 7-Zip open-source archiver . This format is preferred for technical utilities because: | Feature | Alleged Output | Plausibility |
: Use this alongside established monitoring tools like HWiNFO64 to keep a close eye on temperatures and power draw during testing. | Medium – requires extensive testing