Did this coupon
work for you?
work for you?
Post Date | Sold By | Sale Price | Activity |
---|---|---|---|
04/30/24 | Amazon | $175 |
12 |
03/02/24 | Amazon | $189.31 |
0 |
03/01/24 | Newegg | $189.30 frontpage |
31 |
12/15/23 | Newegg | $209 |
0 |
11/23/23 | Amazon | $174 frontpage |
32 |
10/27/23 | Newegg | $207.49 |
2 |
08/27/23 | Amazon | $189 frontpage |
20 |
08/23/23 | Amazon | $189 |
4 |
08/19/23 | Amazon | $189 frontpage |
49 |
06/23/23 | Newegg | $198.99 |
1 |
06/23/23 | Newegg | $198.99 popular |
7 |
06/05/23 | Newegg | $209 frontpage |
28 |
06/01/23 | Newegg | $218.99 |
2 |
05/10/23 | Amazon | $239 |
5 |
05/02/23 | Newegg | $226.99 |
3 |
04/13/23 | Amazon | $202.91 |
5 |
03/20/23 | Amazon | $213.65 frontpage |
47 |
03/20/23 | Amazon | $210.65 |
1 |
02/14/23 | Newegg | $227.50 popular |
5 |
02/09/23 | Newegg | $227.50 popular |
27 |
Sold By | Sale Price |
---|---|
Amazon | $175 |
Best Buy | $225 |
Office Depot and OfficeMax | $518.49 |
Product Name: | AMD Ryzen 7 5800X - Ryzen 7 5000 Series Vermeer (Zen 3) 8-Core 3.8 GHz Socket AM4 105W Desktop Processor - 100-100000063WOF |
Product Description: | AMD Ryzen 7 5800X - Ryzen 7 5000 Series Vermeer (Zen 3) 8-Core 3.8 GHz Socket AM4 105W Desktop Processor - 100-100000063WOF Eligible for FantasTech Price Protection, See Details (3,131)(181) Write a Review Share Lowest pricein 30 days See more "ryzen 7" Check more best sellers of "Processors - Desktops" Check more lowest price of "Processors - Desktops" In stock. Limit 1 per customer.Ships from United States. Options: Ryzen 7 5800XRyzen 5 5600XRyzen 7 5800XRyzen 9 5900XRyzen 9 5950X 7nm Vermeer (Zen 3) 105W 32MB L3 Cache 4MB L2 Cache Windows 11 Supported Free NordVPN Internet Privacy for 6 Devices 12 month VPN Subscription w/ purchase of a qualifying Allstate protection plan 15 New from $274.998 Used from $289.99 |
Product SKU: | N82E16819113665 |
The link has been copied to the clipboard.
54 Comments
Your comment cannot be blank.
Featured Comments
The 12 cores of 5900x are broken up into two isolated sets of six
The 8 cores of the 5800x are grouped as one and that's one reason why the 5800x has always been known as hottest Ryzen cpu
The 5800X also runs games a bit faster
If your 5900X is running hotter you might want to check your thermal paste
The old recipe of using a glop of thermal past in the center is not good for 12 cores.
Just smooth a layer of thermal paste on the whole surface of 5900X
You don't have to use a lot - coverage is the goal and not thickness
I happened to be near a microcenter at the right time, and picked up a 5700x for 225 plus tax. (250 plus 25 dollar coupon that's still available I think)
If you happen to be blessed with a local microcenter, I'd suggest that route. Otherwise, the 5700x is usually around 275-285 regular price.
Sign up for a Slickdeals account to remove this ad.
The 12 cores of 5900x are broken up into two isolated sets of six
The 8 cores of the 5800x are grouped as one and that's one reason why the 5800x has always been known as hottest Ryzen cpu
The 5800X also runs games a bit faster
If your 5900X is running hotter you might want to check your thermal paste
The old recipe of using a glop of thermal past in the center is not good for 12 cores.
Just smooth a layer of thermal paste on the whole surface of 5900X
You don't have to use a lot - coverage is the goal and not thickness
I concur. From my experience less is more. I made that mistake once or twice but never again after that. The layer can't be too thick where the CPU can't make contact with the heatsink. Just a thin layer covering the CPU is good.
Fyi never set limits to motherboard.
Am doing -20 pbo not limited by MB
I happened to be near a microcenter at the right time, and picked up a 5700x for 225 plus tax. (250 plus 25 dollar coupon that's still available I think)
If you happen to be blessed with a local microcenter, I'd suggest that route. Otherwise, the 5700x is usually around 275-285 regular price.
I happened to be near a microcenter at the right time, and picked up a 5700x for 225 plus tax. (250 plus 25 dollar coupon that's still available I think)
If you happen to be blessed with a local microcenter, I'd suggest that route. Otherwise, the 5700x is usually around 275-285 regular price.
The performance difference is sometimes negligible and other times noticable, but you can always drop the 5800x to eco-mode to make it a 5700x essentially. You cant do the same the other way around.
newer version b of cooler
https://www.amazon.com/Scythe-Coo...GH4RD?th=
Sign up for a Slickdeals account to remove this ad.
It's probably not worth the upgrade. I'd aim for the 5900x for the extra cores if you want to stay on AM4 socket however it just depends on your work load/what you're trying to do
Not sure how much AMD might drop their CPUs to match Raptor Lake's release...
I am expecting the prices in 1 month to be roughly the same as today, maybe $5 or $10 lower at most.
I have no reason to build a new PC but the drop in price has me wanting to get back in the game (been Xbox since my last gaming PC built 10 years ago). I'm sure the 5600X would more than satisfy my current needs but all the articles saying to wait for the 7000 series processors have me thinking maybe I should go 5800X for a little longevity. On the flip side if I did a 5600X it would be less of a waste if I choose to get a new board and CPU for the 7000 series (unlikely).
Long and short of this post. 5600X at 175 or 5800 at 275 (no cooler). What should I do? I'd be teaming it with a 6800XT or 6900XT for 1440p ultrawide gaming but with the hopes of eventually getting a VR headset for DCS and the like.
Thanks!
Like someone said you can look at the G series. I might be wrong but I thought I read that all the 7000 series CPU's will have integrated graphics too.
Sign up for a Slickdeals account to remove this ad.
too fast, too furious