At its pre-launch media conference call for the Ryzen Threadripper 1900X, AMD mentioned that the chip has been carved out from the common 4-die EPYC MCM using a "4-0-4-0 diagonal configuration," which led to some confusion as to which cores/dies AMD disabled to carve out the $549 8-core HEDT processor. The company shed some light on this matter, responding to questions from TechPowerUp.It turns out, that the Threadripper 1900X features an entire CCX (quad-core CPU complex) disabled per active die on the multi-chip module, so the CCX that's enabled has 8 MB of L3 cache; and access to the die's entire uncore resources, such as the dual-channel memory controller, PCIe root complex, etc. With two such active "Zeppelin" dies, the Threadripper 1900X ends up with 8 cores, 16 MB of L3 cache, a quad-channel memory interface, and 64 PCIe lanes.The decision to disable an entire CCX, rather than doing something similar to the "Zeppelin" die as with the Ryzen 5 1400, where both CCX units on the die are enabled with 2 cores, each; and the L3 cache per CCX being chopped down to 4 MB; could be attributed to giving the four cores per active CCX a contiguous block of 8 MB L3 cache, to better cushion the NUMA local mode , in which certain applications' memory access can be localized to one die, for lower latency.When AMD talks about a "diagonal configuration," it refers to the fact that two out of four 8-core "Zeppelin" dies physically present on the Threadripper multi-chip module, are disabled. The ones disabled are always diagonally opposite to each other. The Threadripper MCM is physically identical to the 32-core EPYC MCM, with four 8-core "Zeppelin" dies under its large integrated heatspreader (IHS); but due to platform-segmentation, and the fact that the Threadripper socket TR4 HEDT platform only has 4 memory channels (unlike 8 channels on the EPYC platform); two dies are completely disabled. The dies are disabled diagonally probably to spread heat better, or for better package wiring.