⚡ Power your productivity and play with Ryzen 7 5800X — where speed meets mastery!
The AMD Ryzen 7 5800X is a high-performance 8-core, 16-thread desktop processor featuring a 4.7 GHz max boost clock, unlocked for overclocking, with 36 MB cache and DDR4-3200 support. Designed for the advanced AM4 platform, it supports PCIe 4.0 on X570 and B550 motherboards, delivering elite 100+ FPS gaming and multitasking capabilities for professionals and gamers alike.
Processor | 4.7 GHz amd_ryzen_7 |
Brand | AMD |
Series | AMD Ryzen 7 5800X |
Item model number | AMD Ryzen 7 5800X |
Item Weight | 2.8 ounces |
Product Dimensions | 1.57 x 1.57 x 0.1 inches |
Item Dimensions LxWxH | 1.57 x 1.57 x 0.1 inches |
Color | Black |
Processor Brand | AMD |
Number of Processors | 8 |
Computer Memory Type | DIMM |
Batteries | 1 Lithium Ion batteries required. |
Manufacturer | AMD |
Language | English |
ASIN | B0815XFSGK |
Country of Origin | China |
Date First Available | November 5, 2020 |
O**N
Awesome CPU I cannot even max it out with my workload
Just built a new rig after my gaming laptop began stuttering and dying under the workload I put it through. I spent about $1300 for my new machine. I Trade stocks, upscale videos in Topaz to 4k takes about 30 minutes for a 5 minute video. I also use premiere pro. I have had premiere pro rendering a H264 high quality video and Topaz upscaling a video to 4k and temps have gotten at max 68c. I normally idle around 39c. I included a screenshot of the maxed out cpu and temps. Despite all this I can still watch YouTube, trade, browse with no lag or issues even with the cpu loaded with intensive programs. My laptop processor doing the same task would get up to 95c and begin glitching and stuttering all over the place. I got this processor work horse at $153 dollars. I plan to use it for many years to come. I recently returned to the pc building scene and saved a lot of money compared to buying from the big box stores yet again. First off it was cheaper than a gaming laptop, more future proof as I can re use parts if I ever want to upgrade. It also can handle every task I through at it and keep going. I literally do not have the ability to max it out lol. I have it paired with a Asus RTX 4060 8 gig OC edition graphics card. 32 gigs of ram. For cooling I went with thermal grisly paste and a 240mm Dracaena water cooler $54. Radiator mounted to the top of the case. The graphics card is working hard that’s for sure but I spent $349 on it so I fine with it. There is no bottleneck. AMD has really impressed me, last desktop one I had was a vishera 8350 power hog. After that all my builds were Intel. Do I game? not so much. I game in the stock market that’s it. Rendering however is just as intensive. If you don’t want to break the bank and want an outstanding processor get this cpu it is awesome. I actually paid for the computer with just stock option scalping.
A**W
Exactly what I needed!
I never usually buy used PC parts because of the fear of getting illegitimate products but this was not the case. Great CPU that worked right on install and has had no issues so far. Saved a lot of money on a great cpu.
E**S
Console-generation leap for any AM4 rig
Dropped this into my B550 board, flashed BIOS, booted first try. Destiny 2 loads in the time my old Ryzen 1700 used to think about it, and Warzone finally holds triple-digit FPS even during downtown firefights. Single-core boosts brush 4.7 GHz out of the box, leaving headroom for future GPUs. Yes, it runs warm under an air cooler—pair it with decent paste (see above) and a 240 mm AIO if you want silence. For anyone still clinging to first-gen Ryzen, this chip feels like jumping two console generations in one afternoon.
J**A
AMD at Its Finest
The Ryzen 7 5800X at the $170 price point for which I purchased it is an amazing value. It's on the old side at this point, two generations behind the most recent 9000 series and on the previous socket AM4.I already had an AM4 board in my computer with a Ryzen 5 5600 so I only had to the buy the processor. If you're building a completely new computer you should probably go with one of the newer AM5 chips, but if you're like me and you only need the CPU, then it's a great buy for less than two hundred dollars.It's a great gaming CPU, and good for heavily-threaded loads like video editing and 3D modeling, both of which I've dabbled in and found this processor to handle them nicely compared to what I've had previously. It does run a little hot, but I bought a decent dual-tower air cooler (Thermalright Phantom Spirit 120 EVO) and it keeps it in the low 80s under a Prime95 stress test which is totally acceptable.Is it a huge step up from my the 5600 in all cases? Not really, but the additional cores (2 more to be exact, which means 4 more threads overall) has definitely benefitted my ability to record and stream gameplay without absolutely tanking the performance which is the main reason I wanted to upgrade in the first place. It also does seem to make the games perform a little better, I didn't think to make an exact frame-for-frame comparison before putting in the 5800X and reinstalling windows. I know for a fact though that the performance while streaming has improved very noticeably, I used to lose about 30-40% framerate when I would hit "start streaming" in OBS, now it barely goes down 10%, even less in some games.Like I said, if you're buying all the parts for a new computer (CPU, motherboard, RAM, etc.) then you should get a newer one if you can afford it. But, if you're already on AM4, 16 threads of Zen 3 for less than two hundred bucks is a steal, especially when it cost almost $500 when it was first launched.
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