AMD Ryzen 7 5800X (AM4, 3.80 GHz, 8 -Core)
EUR157,68

AMD Ryzen 7 5800X

AM4, 3.80 GHz, 8 -Core


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Pros

Cons

185 reviews

  • avatar
    Dany2

    4 years ago • purchased this product

    purchased this product

    Powerful hothead

    Very good performance. Single core it creates without any oc 4.85 ghz, multi core 4.6 ghz stable on all 8 cores.

    Ryzen Master software I like to read out the temperature, power consumption and the activity of each core.

    Since
    agesa 1.1.8.0 is now also an undervolting feature in the bios available. With this processor also really necessary, because it comes without undervolting even with a good cooler quickly to its 90 degrees.

    In my opinion for PC "beginners" only conditionally to recommend, since one can do very much wrong in the Bios and without undervolting it is for me personally much too warm.
     

    Pro

    • Performance
    • Ryzen Master Software
    • Precision boost overdrive undervolting

    Contra

    • Hot head
    • Price/Performance
  • avatar
    Anonymous

    4 years ago • purchased this product

    purchased this product

    Okay, but...

    The 5800X is certainly not a bad CPU, but the drawbacks still outweigh it. The 5800X is a hothead beyond compare. AMD allows way too high voltages for it to reach the highest possible clock. This results in a very high temperature, which quickly reaches the 90°C limit (from then on it is throttled and represents the AMD maximum). Even in IDLE the 5800X is much more power hungry than my "old" 3800X.
    With many settings in the BIOS (including Curve optimizer), the 5800X can be restrained a little - the ECO mode brakes too much.
    As soon as the 5900X are available, I will switch. The 5900X is easier to optimize because it has two DIEs (better heat distribution) as opposed to the 5800X which only has one DIE (heat in only one spot).
    If I manually select "energy saving mode" in the power options then I achieve max <40° at 2200MHz and ~0.89V. With balanced (standard and recommended) it is +14°C.
     

    Pro

    • Fast

    Contra

    • Hothead
  • avatar
    brightbYte

    4 years ago • purchased this product

    purchased this product

    Just for fun

    The CPU does better, but also consumes more power. Cost/benefit to the 3700 is not worth it. Enjoying technology, always worth it :)

    Pro

    • It is faster than the Ryzen 3700x

    Contra

    • It is too little faster than the Ryzen 3700x ;)
  • avatar
    Anonymous

    4 years ago • purchased this product

    purchased this product

    Hothead

    Unfortunately, the tests you read on the internet are true.
    Cool mine with a Scythe Ninja 5.
    https://www.digitec.ch/de/s1/product/scythe-ninja-5-1550cm-cpu-kuehler-8599063

    Despite a proper cooler, it reaches 87 degrees at
    100% load.
    As soon as the graphics card emits additional heat, it reaches its limit.
    I'll have to deal with the bios a bit more, for better or worse...
    Would I buy it again? I don't think so...
     

    Pro

    • Power

    Contra

    • Temperature
  • avatar
    justlohmi

    4 years ago • purchased this product

    purchased this product

    top CPU after undervolting

    Since the temperatures were too high for me, I undervolted with PBO2. The result is less temperature and more computing power. I have a permanent frequency of 4750 MHz at R20 Cinebench, under continuous load. The temperatures level off at 81-83 degrees. The idle temperature has dropped from about 40 to about 30 degrees. The Borard is a Gigabyte Aorus B550 Pro V2, currently cooled with Noctua D15 (up to 85 degrees fan curve on inaudible) in the Meshify 2 Compact. Graka 6900 XT Red Devil.

    What amazes me this time, it is stable ;) My last AMD build with 3900 and X570 was so mad, even with stock configuration.

    here the tip giver: https://www.youtube.com/watch
     

    Pro

    • computing power

    Contra

    • warm
  • avatar
    mxrtinxz

    4 years ago • purchased this product

    purchased this product

    A little overpriced, good performance!

    It's a little overpriced, but it delivers good performance.
    If you overclock it to 4.7 Ghz, it can get up to 80 degrees hot with a good cooler!
    Think twice about buying the 5600x instead of the 5800x.
    I give it a 7/10 and
    am satisfied. (4 out of 5 stars) 

    Pro

    • Good performance
    • 8c and 16t
    • New Zen 3 Architecture
    • Overclockable up to 4.7 Ghz

    Contra

    • A little overpriced
    • Hot like an oven at maximum heat

6 out of 185 reviews

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