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AMD Ryzen 7 6800U Efficiency Review - Zen3+ beats Intel Alder Lake

AMD vs. Apple vs. Intel. We had to wait quite a while but we finally got our hands on AMD’s latest mobile processors from the Ryzen 6000U generation. We compare the Zen3+ cores of the new Ryzen 7 6800U with Intel’s current Alder Lake-P platform as well as Apple’s M1 Pro SoCs. Who builds the best chip for compact laptops? Update: Results for Ryzen 7 5800U added

AMD’s new 45W processors from the Ryzen 6000 series have been available for a couple of weeks and now we finally have the chance to take an in-depth look at the new Ryzen 7 6800U. The 6800U is a member of the U-series with a nominal TDP of 15W, but AMD already lists a range between 15-28W. Intel only released the new Alder Lake-P models with a much higher TDP so far. The nominal claim is 28W, but we already saw that the new Intel chips consume much more power during our reviews. The real competitor from the Alder Lake-U series, the Intel Core i7-1265U, is not available yet. We will therefore focus on the comparison with the Alder Lake-P CPUs for now, but the results for the single-core performance with the new P-cores should be very similar since the U-series uses the same P-cores. AMD does not really see Apple as a major rival, but we will still include Apple's M1 Pro CPUs in our analysis, which have proven to be very efficient.

Test System - Asus Zenbook S 13 OLED

Asus Zenbook S 13 OLED
Asus Zenbook S 13 OLED

Our test system for the new AMD Ryzen 7 6800U is the Asus Zenbook S 13, which is extremely compact at little more than just 1 kg. Asus offers three different power profiles and we used the Performance setting for the following benchmarks (Windows Power Plan: Asus Recommended, Windows Power Mode: Best Performance). The CPU can consume up to 30W and settles at 25W under sustained workloads, so this will probably be one of the faster implementations. The full review of the Asus Zenbook S 13 will be published in a couple of days.

Ryzen 6000U with 8 Zen3+ Cores

CPU-Z Ryzen 7 6800U
CPU-Z Ryzen 7 6800U

We start with a quick comparison of the chip architecture since there are major differences between the three contenders. Apple successfully uses a hybrid architecture with Performance and Efficiency cores for its M1 chips and Intel’s new Alder Lake CPUs also follow this principle (even though there has already been a Lakefield hybrid chip in the past). However, Intel uses more Efficiency cores and less Performance cores, even though there are different configurations depending on the exact model.

AMD on the other hand still follows the same approach we know from the Ryzen 5000 CPUs with a total of 8 cores for the Ryzen 7 6800U and 6 cores for the slower Ryzen 5 6600U, respectively. AMD now uses Zen3+ cores, which are manufactured in a more advanced 6 nm process and the cores have been further optimized for efficiency. This means AMD has already caught up with Apple (5 nm) and clearly ahead of Intel with the 10 nm process.

Processor Cores Threads Cache Manufacturing Process TDP
AMD Ryzen 7 6800U 8 Zen3+ Cores 16 20 MB L2+L3 6 nm 15-28W
Intel Core i7-1260P 4 Performance + 8 Efficiency 16 18 MB L3 10 nm 28-64W
Apple M1 Pro 8 Performance + 2 Efficiency 10 24 MB L3 5 nm 30W

Customers can also expect advancements in terms of features. In addition to fast LPDDR5-6400 memory, system will support USB 4 (including Thunderbolt compatibility) with up to 40 Gbps, Wi-Fi 6E, and fast PCIe 4.0 SSDs, so there are no disadvantages compared to Intel systems. We will have a closer look at the new Radeon 680M iGPU in a separate article.

Ryzen 6000 offers new features
Ryzen 6000 offers new features

The Rivals - Apple M1 Pro, AMD Zen3, and Intel Alder Lake

We use a total of six comparison systems for this analysis. We included three rivals with modern Alder Lake CPUs from Intel (2x Alder Lake-P & 1x Alder Lake-H), but we will also compare the Zen3+ cores with the previous Zen3 cores (Ryzen 5 5600U) and Apple's M1 Pro CPUs (with 8 and 10 cores) as well. We have listed all the comparison devices in the table below, including their respective TDP settings. We do not have access to a system with the Ryzen 7 5800U right now, but we will add the results as soon as possible.

Update 06/05/2022: We now have test results for the Lenovo IdeaPad 5 Pro 14, where the Ryzen 7 5800U runs at 30W in the Performance mode. However, we cannot offer any data for the single-core tests since the HWiNFO values are highly irregular (the consumption of a single core is higher than all cores combined, which does not make sense), and we do not know why at the moment. We will therefore only include the multi-core results for the time being.

Test model CPU Model CPU Generation Short-term Consumption (PL2) Long-term Consumption (PL1)
Apple MacBook Pro 14 Apple M1 Pro (8 cores) Apple M1 (5 nm) 25 Watts 25 Watts
Apple MacBook Pro 16 Apple M1 Pro (10 cores) Apple M1 (5 nm) 30 Watts 30 Watts
Asus Zenbook Pro 14 Duo Intel Core i7-12700H Intel Alder Lake-H (10 nm) 80 Watts 60 Watts
Dynabook Satellite Pro C50D AMD Ryzen 5 5600U AMD Cezanne (Zen3 - 7 nm) 25 Watts 15 Watts
Lenovo Yoga Slim 7 Pro 14 Intel Core i5-1240P Intel Alder Lake-P (10 nm) 64 Watts 50 Watts
Lenovo Yoga 9i 14 Intel Core i7-1260P Intel Alder Lake-P (10 nm) 64 Watts 38 Watts
Lenovo IdeaPad 5 Pro 14 AMD Ryzen 7 5800U AMD Cezanne (Zen3 - 7 nm) 30 Watts 30 Watts

Test Procedure

Cinebench R23
Cinebench R23

The raw performance is one aspect, but we are going to focus on the efficiency of the current CPU generation in this article. We used the synthetic benchmark Cinebench R23 on all system since it runs natively both on Windows laptops as well as M1 MacBooks. The two tests (single-core & multi-core) were logged (HWiNFO) and then analyzed afterwards. We will therefore include the actual consumption during each benchmark run, which is usually somewhere between the power limits in the multi-core tests. For the MacBooks, we used the PowerMetrics functionality to get the data. We can see the actual consumption of each core on AMD systems and MacBooks, which is not possible on Intel laptops.

Single-Core Performance - Apple stays ahead

AMD Zen3+ vs. Zen3

We can only compare the new Ryzen 7 6800U with the previous Ryzen 5 5600U right now, which is based on the Zen3 cores (Cezanne). The comparison is not totally fair since the Ryzen 7 models have a higher clock. While the Ryzen 5 5600U reaches up to 4.2 GHz (Ryzen 7 5800U up to 4.4 GHz), the new Ryzen 7 6800U can reach up to 4.7 GHz on one core. The Ryzen 7 also has two more active cores, so the package power is slightly higher. It is therefore interesting to compare to the consumption of a single core (9.5W Ryzen 7 6800U vs. 7.5W Ryzen 5 5600U), and the new Ryzen 7 6800U is very close in terms of efficiency, despite the noticeable higher clock.

Power Consumption - Cinebench R23 Single Package Power Efficiency
Dynabook Satellite Pro C50D-B-115
AMD Ryzen 5 5600U
90.8 Points per Watt +16%
Asus Zenbook S 13 OLED
AMD Ryzen 7 6800U
78.3 Points per Watt
Test model CPU Model CPU Package CPU Cores Individual Core CBR23 Single Points Efficiency (Points per Watt) Package/Cores/individual core
Asus ZenBook S 13 Ryzen 7 6800U 19W 16W 9.5W 1488 78 / 93 / 157
Dynabook Satellite Pro C50D Ryzen 5 5600U 15W 11W 7.5W 1233 82 / 112 / 164

AMD Zen3+ vs. Apple M1 Pro

Apple’s M1 Pro is a very efficient chip, especially in single-core scenarios. We can only observe a CPU package consumption of just 7W and around 4W for the active core, which means Apple has a noticeable advantage (2.4x) compared to AMD’s Zen3+ chip. Apple is still ahead in this category and the M1 chip is almost two years old.

Power Consumption - Cinebench R23 Single Package Power Efficiency
Apple MacBook Pro 14 2021 M1 Pro Entry
Apple M1 Pro 8-Core
219 Points per Watt +180%
Apple MacBook Pro 16 2021 M1 Pro
Apple M1 Pro
219 Points per Watt +180%
Asus Zenbook S 13 OLED
AMD Ryzen 7 6800U
78.3 Points per Watt
Test model CPU Model CPU Package Individual Core CBR23 Single Points Efficiency (Points per Watt) Package/Individual Core
Asus ZenBook S 13 Ryzen 7 6800U 19W 9.5W 1488 78 / 157
Apple MacBook Pro 14 M1 Pro (8 Cores) 7W 4W 1531 219 / 383
Apple MacBook Pro 16 M1 Pro (10 Cores) 7W 4W 1531 219 / 383

AMD Zen3+ vs. Intel Alder Lake

We have already shown that the new Alder Lake processors are very powerful thanks with their Performance cores and also faster than the rivals, but the Performance cores fall behind AMD’s new Zen3+ cores in terms of efficiency. The comparison between the three Intel models is also very interesting, because the Performance cores are basically identical on all three models. The maximum clock of the Core i5-1240P is lower, so it is more efficient. The Core i7-12700H has a slightly higher package power than the Core i7-1260P, which should be a result of the two additional Performance cores. However, our results once again show how inefficient the 10 nm chips are at higher clocks. The upcoming U-series models use the same P-cores and Intel lists a maximum clock of 4.8 GHz for the Core i7-1265U, for example, which is even 100 MHz higher compared to the Core i7-1260P and Core i7-12700H, so we expect a very high single-core power consumption.

Power Consumption - Cinebench R23 Single Package Power Efficiency
Asus Zenbook S 13 OLED
AMD Ryzen 7 6800U
78.3 Points per Watt
Lenovo Yoga Slim 7i Pro 14IAP G7
Intel Core i5-1240P
64 Points per Watt -18%
Lenovo Yoga 9i 14 2022 i7-1260P
Intel Core i7-1260P
61.8 Points per Watt -21%
Asus Zenbook Pro 14 Duo OLED UX8402ZA
Intel Core i7-12700H
58.3 Points per Watt -26%
Test model CPU Model CPU Package CPU Cores CBR23 Single Points Efficiency (Points per Watt) Package/Cores
Asus ZenBook S 13 Ryzen 7 6800U 19W 16W 1488 78 / 93
Asus ZenBook Pro 14 Duo Intel Core i7-12700H 31W 26W 1807 58 / 70
Lenovo Yoga 9i 14 Intel Core i7-1260P 29W 26W 1793 62 / 69
Lenovo Yoga Slim 7 Pro 14 Intel Core i5-1240P 26W 23W 1663 64 / 72

Overview Single-Core Efficiency

We have listed all test systems in the following overview ranked by their efficiency (CPU package power).

Power Consumption - Cinebench R23 Single Package Power Efficiency
Apple MacBook Pro 14 2021 M1 Pro Entry
Apple M1 Pro 8-Core
219 Points per Watt +180%
Apple MacBook Pro 16 2021 M1 Pro
Apple M1 Pro
219 Points per Watt +180%
Dynabook Satellite Pro C50D-B-115
AMD Ryzen 5 5600U
90.8 Points per Watt +16%
Asus Zenbook S 13 OLED
AMD Ryzen 7 6800U
78.3 Points per Watt
Lenovo Yoga Slim 7i Pro 14IAP G7
Intel Core i5-1240P
64 Points per Watt -18%
Lenovo Yoga 9i 14 2022 i7-1260P
Intel Core i7-1260P
61.8 Points per Watt -21%
Asus Zenbook Pro 14 Duo OLED UX8402ZA
Intel Core i7-12700H
58.3 Points per Watt -26%
Test model CPU Model CPU Package CPU Cores Individual Core CBR23 Single Points Efficiency (Points per Watt) Package/Cores/individual cores
Apple MacBook Pro 14 M1 Pro (8 Kerne) 7W - 4W 1.531 219 / - / 383
Apple MacBook Pro 16 M1 Pro (10 Kerne) 7W - 4W 1.531 219 / - / 383
Dynabook Satellite Pro C50D Ryzen 5 5600U 15W 11W 7,5W 1.233 82 / 112 / 164
Asus ZenBook S 13 Ryzen 7 6800U 19W 16W 9.5W 1.488 78 / 93 / 157
Lenovo Yoga Slim 7 Pro 14 Intel Core i5-1240P 26W 23W - 1.663 64 / 72 / -
Lenovo Yoga 9i 14 Intel Core i7-1260P 29W 26W - 1.793 62 / 69 / -
Asus ZenBook Pro 14 Duo Intel Core i7-12700H 31W 26W - 1.807 58 / 70 / -

Multi-Core Performance - AMD is much more efficient than Intel Alder Lake

AMD Zen3+ vs. Zen3

The clocks of the individual cores are obviously a bit lower in multi-core scenarios, and we can see a small advantage for the new Ryzen 7 6800U with the Zen3+ cores compared to the old Ryzen 5 5600U. Once again, we will add the results for the Ryzen 7 5800U as soon as possible.

We were curious to see how the new CPU performance at lower power levels and repeated the Cinebench R23 Multi test in the Whisper mode setting of the Zenbook S 13, which reduces the TDP limits of the Ryzen 7 6800U to 12W (Package) and 10W for the cores. The efficiency increases dramatically, which means the Ryzen 6000U chips are also a very good choice for systems with a comparatively limited cooling performance (like 15W for example), where they would still perform pretty respectably.

Update 06/05/2022: The Ryzen 7 5800U at 30W is not quite as efficient as the Ryzen 7 6800U at 28W, but the results are pretty close overall.

Power Consumption - Cinebench R23 Multi Package Power Efficiency
Asus Zenbook S 13 OLED
AMD Ryzen 7 6800U
374 Points per Watt
Lenovo IdeaPad 5 Pro 14ACN-82L700P5GE
AMD Ryzen 7 5800U
354 Points per Watt -5%
Dynabook Satellite Pro C50D-B-115
AMD Ryzen 5 5600U
327 Points per Watt -13%
Test model CPU Model CPU Package CPU Cores CBR23 Multi Points Efficiency (Points per Watt) Package/Cores
Asus ZenBook S 13 Ryzen 7 6800U 28W 25.5W 10468 374 / 411
Dynabook Satellite Pro C50D Ryzen 5 5600U 21W 17.8W 6871 327 / 386
Asus Zenbook S 13 Flüstermodus Ryzen 7 6800U 12W 10W 6725 560 / 672
Lenovo IdeaPad 5 Pro 14 Ryzen 7 5800U 30W 27.4W 10624 354 / 388

AMD Zen3+ vs. Apple M1 Pro

Apple’s M1 CPUs have a package power of 25W for the 8-core system and 31W for the 10-core version of the M1 Pro. This means Apple is still ahead, but the AMD Ryzen 7 6800U is much closer and almost on par in terms of CPU package power.

Power Consumption - Cinebench R23 Multi Package Power Efficiency
Apple MacBook Pro 16 2021 M1 Pro
Apple M1 Pro
399 Points per Watt +7%
Apple MacBook Pro 14 2021 M1 Pro Entry
Apple M1 Pro 8-Core
383 Points per Watt +2%
Asus Zenbook S 13 OLED
AMD Ryzen 7 6800U
374 Points per Watt
Test model CPU Model CPU Package CPU Cores CBR23 Multi Points Efficiency (Points per Watt) Package/Cores
Asus ZenBook S 13 Ryzen 7 6800U 28W 25.5W 10468 374 / 411
Apple MacBook Pro 14 M1 Pro (8 Cores) 25W 21W 9581 383 / 456
Apple MacBook Pro 16 M1 Pro (10 Cores) 31W 27W 12370 399 / 458

AMD Zen3+ vs. Intel Alder Lake

The efficiency advantage of the new Ryzen 7 6800U over the current Alder Lake models is much bigger in multi-core tests and contrary to the single-core tests, there is no real performance advantage anymore, either. Even the Core i7-1260P with a much higher power consumption is just slightly ahead in the benchmarks and our results once again show how inefficient Alder Lake is at higher consumption values. The Core i5-1240P in the Yoga Slim 7 Pro consumes much more power than the Core i7-1260P in the Yoga 9i 14, but this is hardly noticeable in the performance.

It is also interesting to see how Alder Lake-P chips perform at lower power levels when the cooling performance is limited. This is the case for the Samsung Galaxy Book 2 Pro 13, where the CPU is quickly limited to just 20W. The efficiency increase is very small compared to the gains we saw for the Ryzen 7 6800U at 12W, which means Intel’s hybrid architecture with the 10 nm cores is not really suited for very compact systems. These are not good news for the upcoming Alder Lake-U CPUs, which are positioned in the 15W class. However, Intel still lists a maximum consumption of 55W, even though these chips are only equipped with 2 P-cores. Based on our results so far, we do not believe the Alder Lake-U systems will be very competitive, neither in terms of performance, nor efficiency.

Power Consumption - Cinebench R23 Multi Package Power Efficiency
Asus Zenbook S 13 OLED
AMD Ryzen 7 6800U
374 Points per Watt
Samsung Galaxy Book2 Pro 13 NP930XED-KA1DE
Intel Core i5-1240P
258 Points per Watt -31%
Lenovo Yoga 9i 14 2022 i7-1260P
Intel Core i7-1260P
244 Points per Watt -35%
Asus Zenbook Pro 14 Duo OLED UX8402ZA
Intel Core i7-12700H
222 Points per Watt -41%
Lenovo Yoga Slim 7i Pro 14IAP G7
Intel Core i5-1240P
197.6 Points per Watt -47%
Test model CPU Model CPU Package CPU Cores CBR23 Multi Points Efficiency (Points per Watt) Package/Cores
Asus ZenBook S 13 Ryzen 7 6800U 28W 25.5W 10468 374 / 411
Asus ZenBook Pro 14 Duo Intel Core i7-12700H 68W 63W 15101 222 / 240
Lenovo Yoga 9i 14 Intel Core i7-1260P 44W 41W 10735 244 / 262
Lenovo Yoga Slim 7 Pro 14 Intel Core i5-1240P 57W 53W 11266 198 / 213
Samsung Galaxy Book 2 Pro 13 Intel Core i5-1240P 22W 19W 5680 258 / 299

Overview Multi-Core Efficiency

We once again listed all systems based on their efficiency below. Apple’s M1 Pro is once again at the top, but AMD is almost on the same level with the new Ryzen 7 6800U. Intel’s current Alder Lake models on the other hand clearly fall behind in terms of efficiency.

Power Consumption - Cinebench R23 Multi Package Power Efficiency
Apple MacBook Pro 16 2021 M1 Pro
Apple M1 Pro
399 Points per Watt +7%
Apple MacBook Pro 14 2021 M1 Pro Entry
Apple M1 Pro 8-Core
383 Points per Watt +2%
Asus Zenbook S 13 OLED
AMD Ryzen 7 6800U
374 Points per Watt
Lenovo IdeaPad 5 Pro 14ACN-82L700P5GE
AMD Ryzen 7 5800U
354 Points per Watt -5%
Dynabook Satellite Pro C50D-B-115
AMD Ryzen 5 5600U
327 Points per Watt -13%
Lenovo Yoga 9i 14 2022 i7-1260P
Intel Core i7-1260P
244 Points per Watt -35%
Asus Zenbook Pro 14 Duo OLED UX8402ZA
Intel Core i7-12700H
222 Points per Watt -41%
Lenovo Yoga Slim 7i Pro 14IAP G7
Intel Core i5-1240P
197.6 Points per Watt -47%
Test model CPU Model CPU Package CPU Cores CBR23 Multi Points Efficiency (Points per Watt) Package/Cores
Apple MacBook Pro 16 M1 Pro (10 Cores) 31W 27W 12370 399 / 458
Apple MacBook Pro 14 M1 Pro (8 Cores) 25W 21W 9581 383 / 456
Asus ZenBook S 13 Ryzen 7 6800U 28W 25.5W 10468 374 / 411
Lenovo IdeaPad 5 Pro 14 Ryzen 7 5800U 30W 27.4W 10624 354 / 388
Dynabook Satellite Pro C50D Ryzen 5 5600U 21W 17.8W 6871 327 / 386
Lenovo Yoga 9i 14 Intel Core i7-1260P 44W 41W 10735 244 / 262
Asus ZenBook Pro 14 Duo Intel Core i7-12700H 68W 63W 15101 222 / 240
Lenovo Yoga Slim 7 Pro 14 Intel Core i5-1240P 57W 53W 11266 198 / 213

In addition to our measurements with Cinebench R23, we also want to have a look at Cinebench R15, which is tested in combination with an external display by default in our reviews, so we can eliminate the internal screen for the consumption results. Note: Cinebench R15 has to be emulated on the M1 MacBooks, so the performance is lower and our reviews show that the chips also consume more power in these scenarios. Cinebench R15 Multi is not a very long benchmark, either, so many Intel devices can often utilize their full power limit during the first benchmark run.

All in all, the picture is very similar, because the new Ryzen 7 6800U is at the top and does not only clearly beat the old Ryzen 7 5800U, but also the Alder Lake models. However, we do not want to dismiss the fact that Intel was able to improve the efficiency compared to the old Tiger Lake mobile CPUs like the quad-core Core i7-1165G7.

Power Consumption - Cinebench R15 Multi Efficiency (external Monitor)
Lenovo ThinkBook 13s G3 20YA0005GE
Vega 8, R7 5800U, WDC PC SN530 SDBPNPZ-512G
44.9 Points per Watt +12%
Asus Zenbook S 13 OLED
Radeon 680M, R7 6800U, Samsung PM9A1 MZVL21T0HCLR
40.2 Points per Watt
Apple MacBook Pro 16 2021 M1 Pro
M1 Pro 16-Core GPU, M1 Pro, Apple SSD AP1024R
35 Points per Watt -13%
Samsung Galaxy Book2 Pro 13 NP930XED-KA1DE
Iris Xe G7 80EUs, i5-1240P, Samsung PM991a MZVLQ256HBJD
30.9 Points per Watt -23%
Lenovo Yoga Slim 7i Pro 14IAP G7
Iris Xe G7 80EUs, i5-1240P, Samsung PM9A1 MZVL2512HCJQ
28.1 Points per Watt -30%
Asus Zenbook Pro 14 Duo OLED UX8402ZA
Iris Xe G7 96EUs, i7-12700H, Samsung PM9A1 MZVL2512HCJQ
24.3 Points per Watt -40%
Lenovo Yoga 9i 14 2022 i7-1260P
Iris Xe G7 96EUs, i7-1260P, Samsung PM9A1 MZVL21T0HCLR
22.2 Points per Watt -45%
Lenovo ThinkPad X13 G2 20WK0024GE
Iris Xe G7 96EUs, i7-1165G7, SK Hynix HFS512 GDE9X081N
16.9 Points per Watt -58%
Microsoft Surface Laptop Studio i7 RTX 3050 Ti
GeForce RTX 3050 Ti Laptop GPU, i7-11370H, SK Hynix PC711 1TB HFS001TDE9X084N
14.1 Points per Watt -65%

Verdict - AMD offers the best mobile CPU right now

The new AMD Ryzen 7 6800U leaves a very good impression so far. The single-core performance is not as good as on the new Alder Lake chips, but the multi-core performance is comparable and the new Ryzen CPU is way more efficient. AMD also managed to improve the integrated GPU, but we will take a closer look at the new RDNA2 GPU in a separate article.

We expect more laptops with Ryzen 6000U CPUs in the next couple of weeks and the real rivals for the 6000U models, the Alder Lake-U chips like the Core i7-1265U, should be available in a few weeks as well. They use a similar hybrid architecture as other Alder Lake chips, but with fewer P-cores. Intel still lists a maximum consumption of 55W, which worries us a bit. The high consumption values do not only result in shorter battery runtimes (even with simple workloads), but we also observed more frequent fan activity in our reviews so far.

Based on our results so far, the AMD Ryzen 6000U chips are the best mobile processors for Windows laptops right now. The big question is if manufacturers will use the AMD chips for their premium laptops and if they will be available in larger quantities, where Intel has an advantage right now.

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> Expert Reviews and News on Laptops, Smartphones and Tech Innovations > Reviews > AMD Ryzen 7 6800U Efficiency Review - Zen3+ beats Intel Alder Lake
Andreas Osthoff, 2022-05-31 (Update: 2022-06- 6)