AMD seems to be lining up another Ryzen PRO 9000 desktop chip, and this one has already appeared in PassMark before any official announcement. The new Ryzen 7 PRO 9755 is an 8-core, 16-thread processor that looks very close to the Ryzen 7 PRO 9745 in both specs and early benchmark results.

That kind of quiet pre-launch appearance is hardly unusual for AMD, which has been filling out the PRO line with small-batch refreshes rather than flashy new family launches. In practice, it usually means the company wants another SKU for business systems without changing the underlying platform story.

Ryzen 7 PRO 9755 specs in PassMark

According to PassMark, the Ryzen 7 PRO 9755 carries the same cache layout as the Ryzen 7 PRO 9745: 8 MB of L2 cache and 32 MB of L3 cache, for 40 MB in total. Clock speeds are still missing from the database, so the listing gives more shape than substance for now.

  • 8 cores
  • 16 threads
  • 8 MB L2 cache
  • 32 MB L3 cache
  • 40 MB total cache

Image: Videocardz

Ryzen 7 PRO 9755 benchmark results are nearly identical

In PassMark CPU Mark, the Ryzen 7 PRO 9755 scored 38,100 points, while its single-thread result came in at 4,604 points. That puts it almost side by side with the Ryzen 7 PRO 9745, which posted 37,082 and 4,609 points, respectively. In other words, this is shaping up as a near-twin rather than a dramatic rethink.

That makes sense for AMD’s PRO lineup, where stability and platform consistency matter more than headline-chasing. A slightly renamed chip with familiar specs is exactly the sort of move OEMs like: fewer surprises, easier qualification, and one more option for corporate desktops.

AMD has not announced the Ryzen 7 PRO 9755 yet

AMD has not officially introduced the Ryzen 7 PRO 9755, so the PassMark entry is still just a strong hint rather than a launch event. But these database sightings tend to show up when a release is getting close, and this one fits that pattern neatly.

The bigger question is whether AMD is simply filling a naming gap in the Ryzen PRO 9000 range or preparing a wider refresh of business CPUs. If the 9755 is any sign, the company is still happy to ship incremental updates as long as they keep system builders supplied with fresh badges.

Source: Ixbt

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