Our research indicates that this offer is $19 lower (8% savings) than the next best available price from a reputable merchant with prices starting from $233 at the time of this post.
Reviews:
Rating of 4.8 out of 5 stars from over 13,000 Amazon customer reviews.
About this store:
Don't have Amazon Prime? Students can get a free 6-Month Amazon Prime trial with free 2-day shipping, unlimited video streaming & more.
This collaborative space allows users to contribute additional information, tips, and insights to enhance the original deal post. Feel free to share your knowledge and help fellow shoppers make informed decisions.
Our research indicates that this offer is $19 lower (8% savings) than the next best available price from a reputable merchant with prices starting from $233 at the time of this post.
Reviews:
Rating of 4.8 out of 5 stars from over 13,000 Amazon customer reviews.
About this store:
Don't have Amazon Prime? Students can get a free 6-Month Amazon Prime trial with free 2-day shipping, unlimited video streaming & more.
Deal History includes data from multiple reputable stores, such as Best Buy, Target, and Walmart. The lowest price among stores for a given day is selected as the "Sale Price".
Sale Price does not include sale prices at Amazon unless a deal was posted by a community member.
Not sure they're still making them, so, eventually they go back up except on the used market. The question is, when does it hit bottom, and will you recognize it when it happens? Is it now?
I just bought a 5700X a week or so back for $185 for my old x470 MSI Gaming Pro. The 5800X was about $220-ish price at the time, and I considered it for half a second. The 65W TDP on the 5700X is better for non-5XX series boards, and this gets close to the 5800X in almost all performance metrics while being substantially less power hungry.
If I have a b450m ds3h v1 motherboard with an updated bios would I be able to use this CPU? Or should I just go with the 5700x?
Quote
from madshakes
:
if it supports the 5700x, it'll support the 5800x
While that's true, the main issue I've come to find is the VRM on 4xx series boards. That was before board makers were taking AMD serious again, and they were still a bit shy about putting decent VRMs on their motherboards. The VRM on 5xx (particularly after the initial wave of X570 boards) is far superior to anything in the 4xx generation.
The 5800X will only show real advantage over the 5700X if paired with a decent VRM. The silicon at the normal voltage range and CPU frequencies is going to essentially act the same (if you turn PBO on, which you absolutely should) On a weaker (X470/B450) VRM you might get a spike of higher frequency for a few seconds under load, but then it will settle down to its sustained frequency under extended load that will be close-to if not identical to the frequencies you'll get with 5700X.
You really need a better VRM to get any meaningful advantage with the 5800X over the 5700X. Unless you have one of the very top tier 4xx boards, you aren't getting a good enough VRM to boost at sustained higher clocks. They can "do it" on paper, but voltage droop and other issues emerge, causing higher performing (higher TDP) newer AM4 chips to fall back a bit in frequency compared to how they perform on better VRMs that tend to be found on 5xx series boards.
All that, and even with a better VRM, the 5800X barely nudges out the 5700X. with most games and some productivity tasks, they're virtually identical.
NOTE: the video conclusion was based on pricing at the time, which was $300. At current pricing, I'm sure his views on the 5700X & 5800X vs the 5600X would change.
ASROCK B550-ITX/ac is great ITX board with builtin WiFi and the NVMe slot has builtin head shield. I am building 2nd build with this motherboard in a Hyte Revolt 3 case. Very reasonable price for what you get: $120-$130. My latest micro-ATX buld used the Gigabyte Aorus Elite.
Can you tell me BIOS it comes with? Would like to pair it with a 5600g. Thanks.
Not everyone lives near a microcenter. You can get these cheaper than 189 every day in the tech markets of China, but everyone doesn't live near Shenzhen either.
So does this mean that the 5700X will also soon be coming down in price? $180 is not bad but since I don't really NEED one at present I'd prefer it to come down to $150 or so before buying, and can wait.
So does this mean that the 5700X will also soon be coming down in price? $180 is not bad but since I don't really NEED one at present I'd prefer it to come down to $150 or so before buying, and can wait.
+1, Im currently waiting for 5700x to come down to $150, and pairs with 6750XT when it comes down to $350.
Leave a Comment
Top Comments
I just bought a 5700X a week or so back for $185 for my old x470 MSI Gaming Pro. The 5800X was about $220-ish price at the time, and I considered it for half a second. The 65W TDP on the 5700X is better for non-5XX series boards, and this gets close to the 5800X in almost all performance metrics while being substantially less power hungry.
Currently $189 for the 5700X:
https://www.amazon.com/AMD-5700X-...B09VCHQHZ6
Not a better deal per se, but better thermals/efficiency with really close capabilities.
46 Comments
Sign up for a Slickdeals account to remove this ad.
The 5800X will only show real advantage over the 5700X if paired with a decent VRM. The silicon at the normal voltage range and CPU frequencies is going to essentially act the same (if you turn PBO on, which you absolutely should) On a weaker (X470/B450) VRM you might get a spike of higher frequency for a few seconds under load, but then it will settle down to its sustained frequency under extended load that will be close-to if not identical to the frequencies you'll get with 5700X.
You really need a better VRM to get any meaningful advantage with the 5800X over the 5700X. Unless you have one of the very top tier 4xx boards, you aren't getting a good enough VRM to boost at sustained higher clocks. They can "do it" on paper, but voltage droop and other issues emerge, causing higher performing (higher TDP) newer AM4 chips to fall back a bit in frequency compared to how they perform on better VRMs that tend to be found on 5xx series boards.
All that, and even with a better VRM, the 5800X barely nudges out the 5700X. with most games and some productivity tasks, they're virtually identical.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Kr5V1lg
NOTE: the video conclusion was based on pricing at the time, which was $300. At current pricing, I'm sure his views on the 5700X & 5800X vs the 5600X would change.
Should I expect significant performance gains in productivity and gaming by making an upgrade now?
Or would it be better to wait for the 5900/5950x to come down further?
Thanks in advance.
https://www.microcenter
Our community has rated this post as helpful. If you agree, why not thank b.arms
https://www.microcenter.com/produ...t-included [microcenter.com]
Sign up for a Slickdeals account to remove this ad.
Looking to upgrade my Zen 5 3600 to prolong the like of my 2070 Super GPU for at least another 16-20 months
I mostly play warzone + BF2042 and do photo editing. This wouldnt give that big of a jump to warrant the upgrade... right ?
EDIT: i thought this wa the 5800 X3D ... forget i posted :x
Sign up for a Slickdeals account to remove this ad.
Leave a Comment