It has been the American overulser Sampson, part of AMD's overders team, which has earned this new world record. Just find it using liquid nitrogen to cool the processor, which he saw in it the maximum operating frequency reaches 5,250 MHz, which is 81% with respect to the basic frequency of this processor (remember that it operates at 2.9 GHz, up to 4.3 GHz in turbo mode).
New world record on the Cinebench R20
The Cinebench R20 is one of the best benchmarks for eliminating processor power transmission. Also, if something can boast the Threadripper 3990X is (in addition to setting records) its power to provide, because we remember it's a professional-oriented processor, starting with price.
Reaching this new world record with 3990X, the overulser used as we said liquid nitrogen to cool the processor, reaches a temperature of more than 81 degrees below zero. When we go through the processor we find a 32 GB G.Skill Trident Z Royal RAM memory kit running at 2800 MHz with latitude CL14-14-14-32 (and a few other tendencies).
As you can see from the screenshot obtained by the world record, the value is 40,527 cb which represents not only a new world record for performance but also the second time 40,000 points are exceeded on this bench.
So far the records have been owned by the SpLAVE overulser, with the same processor but at 5,225 MHz with 40,304 points. However, we see a big jump when we move into third place, having a record again with 3990X but at 4,099 Mhz and with only 31,986 points off the bench.
When will Threadripper 3990X stop breaking records?
As we mentioned earlier, the market introduction of this processor at a price of over 4,000 euros was putting it from the beginning out of reach of the majority of users. AMD won't sell many units and they knew about it, and yet they never stop satisfying them because the skill shown seems limitless. We should praise AMD for this work, even though we re-emphasize the fact that it is not a thought process, precisely, to be a top-selling product.
This processor is not only a beast of 64 cores and 128 threads with a SMT process, but it also looks extremely powerful and, thus, breaking the working world records. And it turns out that in the hands of experts it looks like you're playing in a very different league because every time they hit a new world record they did it by making a huge difference to the previous record, as it always has.