Geekbench has seen the emergence of a new mobile AMD processor that comes with a pigtail in its name that we’ve never seen before in the brand, and that will lead to a new line of branded processors or even a similar category scheme to Intel. AMD could have announced the Athlon 3000G last week, but apparently the chip manufacturer has not yet completed the Athlon series announcements. A recent Geekbench list refers to a new chip, the Athlon Gold 3150U, which is probably designed for laptops.
AMD Athlon Gold 3150U APU appears in GeekBench
It seems that AMD is trying to copy the nomenclatures of Intel, which has the Pentium Gold and Silver in its favor on its portfolio. This is the first time we have seen an AMD processor called “Gold” in the model name.
We also find 4 MB of L3 cache memory and Radeon graphics, which are probably Vega-3 graphics as we normally see them in desktop models, and that although they’re not exactly graphic beasts, they work quite well in everyday situations and even in light games.
Geekbench 4 recognized the Athlon Gold 3150U as a piece of Raven Ridge. However, there are some doubts because Geekbench 4 was wrong in the past. If we look closely at the Athlon Gold 3150U list, we can see AMD Family 23 Model 24 Stepping 1 as identification. This is the same identification as the Athlon 300U, which belongs to the Picasso family. The processor ID for Raven Ridge is AMD Family 23 Model 17 Stepping 0, so the Athlon Gold 3150U and Athlon 300U are most likely brothers. Both processors even share identical specifications based on the Geekbench list.
The Athlon Gold 3150U comes with two cores and four threads. The processor has a 2.4 GHz base clock and a turbo clock that scales to 3.28 GHz; however, it is believed that when the processor is on the market it will reach 3.3 GHz. The dual-core APU appears to have 193KB of L1 cache, 1MB of L2 cache, and 4MB of L3 cache.
Since the Athlon Gold 3150U and the Athlon 300U have similar specifications, it is difficult to know exactly which is faster without knowing the TDP (Thermal Design Power) of the former. However, a quick comparison in Geekbench 4 shows that the Athlon Gold 3150U wins. Apparently it’s 3.3% faster than the Athlon 300U on single-core workloads and 7.4% faster on multi-core workloads.