AMD Ryzen 9 5900X 12-core, 24-Thread Unlocked Desktop Processor

$282.87

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Price: $282.87
(as of Dec 22, 2024 20:24:58 UTC – Details)


Be unstoppable with the unprecedented speed of the world’s best desktop processors. AMD Ryzen 5000 Series processors deliver the ultimate in high performance, whether you’re playing the latest games, designing the next skyscraper or crunching scientific data. With AMD Ryzen, you’re always in the lead. A fast and easy way to expand and accelerate the storage in a desktop PC with an AMD Ryzen™ processor.
The world’s best gaming desktop processor, with 12 cores and 24 processing threads
Can deliver elite 100-plus FPS performance in the world’s most popular games
Cooler not included, high-performance cooler recommended. Max Temperature- 90°C
4.8 GHz Max Boost, unlocked for overclocking, 70 MB of cache, DDR-3200 support
For the advanced Socket AM4 platform, can support PCIe 4.0 on X570 and B550 motherboards

Customers say

Customers appreciate the computer processor’s performance, speed, and value for money. They find it performs well for gaming, video editing, and compression/uncompression tasks. Many consider it a worthwhile upgrade and a good value for the price. However, opinions vary on temperature.

AI-generated from the text of customer reviews

7 reviews for AMD Ryzen 9 5900X 12-core, 24-Thread Unlocked Desktop Processor

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  1. sprg

    Wow!
    This is an absolute beast of a CPU.I bought this to upgrade my B450 system from a Ryzen 5 2600.First thing I did was check my boards compatibility with this chip, luckily, the BIOS was quite a lot newer than when support was added, so I didn’t need to do any updates. If you do though, make sure you do it before you install this CPU.I, really, didn’t think I’d feel that big of a performance improvement. Boy was I wrong…I put the CPU into “eco mode” through the BIOS (it was under AMD Overclocking on my ASUS Prime B450 board), as I’m only using a Noctua NH-U12S as a cooler. I plan to eventually get a more capable cooler, but this is working just fine, CPU is peaking out at 65C in eco mode with the single tower Noctua, pretty impressive if you ask me.My Ryzen 5 2600 ran around the same temps under load, and idled in the 40s, this idles a bit higher, but it doesn’t really get much warmer than idle from what I can tell, at least with my system configuration.While I was removing my previous CPU it was actually “stuck” to the cooler. It actually popped right out of the socket… at first I was a bit worried that I may have accidentally broken something but… i apparently got very lucky. No pins were damaged on the old CPU, and it booted up fine in another system I tested it in.New CPU installation was very easy, just line up the triangle to the corner on the socket with a triangle, after opening the clamp bar of course. The clamp bar easily went back into place, and held the new CPU just fine. *Whew*At first I thought I may have damaged the motherboard, but… I took this as a chance to do a good cleaning of the inside of my case, and when I put the system back together… I forgot to plug in the GPU power cable *doh*. After plugging that back in, the system rebooted about 1000 times (got to love ASUS boards!), and then asked me if I wanted to overwrite the fTPM settings. I did, I run Linux and I don’t use the fTPM. If you’re running Windows 11, you may want to go through whatever procedure you need to go through to save this. You’ll need it. You need to do this while your old CPU is installed though, or you’ll have to go through the whole process of putting it back in if you don’t! Luckily, I didn’t need to, but be aware of this.After wiping the fTPM settings and a few thousand more reboots (exaggerating a bit, it was probably 10 total, ASUS boards really like to do that), I was presented with a screen that said a new CPU was detected, and that all BIOS settings were cleared. Cool! So far so good!I spent some time going through and reenabling my RAM speed profile (got to make full use of the 128GB of 3200MHz RAM I installed yesterday!), turning virtualization back on, and enabling eco mode (I didn’t want to get a new cooler right now if I could get away with it). Enabling eco mode did bring the CPU temp down about 10 degrees in the BIOS, and from reading around the internet, doesn’t really seem to impact performance *that* much. Easier than fiddling with undervolting settings I’d say…After finally getting booted back up into my OS… I was actually kind of impressed already. Just from the increase in boot speed alone I already knew this was going to be good. It wasn’t *slow* on my 2600 at all, it’s still a very capable chip, but wow, this blows it out of the water.I’ve been working on a rust project lately, it compiles in about… 45-55 seconds on my 2600… I did the same project compile on the 5900X? 6 seconds. Even in eco mode. Wow oh mighty. The power of 6 more cores and a dozen more threads.I also run a Windows VM for several income producing applications (y’know, we all got to work, otherwise we can’t buy these fancy new pieces of sand we send lightning through), and wow. Oh boy wow. Like I said, the 2600 wasn’t *slow* by any stretch of the imagination, but the responsiveness and speed now is just absolutely incredible. The VM boots so much faster, every application is up and running almost instantly… and that’s with only 6 cores dedicated to it…If you’ve got an older AM4 system. Buy this. Buy this before they stop making them. Buy this, and upgrade your BIOS if you need to. Just get it. Seriously. This is a monumental leap in performance that will *absolutely* extend the life of your AM4 system by several years. This is *far* cheaper than building a new AM5/DDR5 system, and you will be absolutely blown away by the performance increase.For $350 as of the time of this writing… it’s worth every penny. Best performance upgrade I’ve ever made, for sure.

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  2. James

    A solid upgrade to my 3800x
    TL;DR; the CPU is excellent at what it does (workstation/gaming), I see no reason to adopt Intel’s attempt at a new chip design for quite a few years, assuming it becomes the norm. Also, please ensure you cool this properly, it needs a good cooler, especially with DOCP settings on RAM.I have an odd setup, so a brief backstory may help you understand some of my views of the product.I adopted Ryzen toward the beginning of the 5000 series life during the chip shortage. At the time I was forced to use a 3800x as it was the most cost effective stop-gap at the time (or pay close to 1K for this 5900x). My new system was built to be a gaming machine but also be a home lab for myself. I installed openSUSE Leap on my machine (I’m more comfortable in Linux based OSes so I chose one for the host machine), and got to work building my home lab first.After setting up a Puppetserver VM, GitLab, Registry, a VPN for my cloud VMs, and a samba 4 Active Directory PDC, I found the 5900x didn’t skip a beat with 6 “cores” being shared between all Homelab VMs and the host (Using logical threads on CCD1). What really exceeded my expectations was when the Windows gaming VM became involved. I took all logical threads from CCD2 (6 cores/12 threads) and passed it to the Windows VM.While the performance in CPU bound workloads suffered (FFXIV heavily populated areas bring the emulated CPU to its knees), everything else at 1440p, I could hardly tell a difference between a native windows install and this VM. All this, while running a GNOME 3 instance on the host with YouTube, Discord, Docker, VSCode etc running various workloads, plus the other VMs. This CPU lives up to its reputation of being a multithreaded workhorse that will not stand between your GPU and your game, even in a VM (limitations and exceptions notwithstanding), and as a workstation CPU I can’t recommend it enough.I am very happy with this product, and with the prices finally coming down as enthusiast trip and fall over each other chasing Intels new E-core/P-core monstrosity, it’s priced to sell for what I believe it is well worth.Specs (for reference even if I’m not providing benchmarks, anyone dabbling in IOMMU/VFIO will find it useful)Cooler: Corsair H150i Elite AIOCPU: Ryzen 5900xRAM: 64 GB Corsair Vengeance (3200MHz)MB: ASUS Tuf x570 Plus (Wi-Fi)GPU (Windows VM): Sapphire Radeon 6800XT Nitro+GPU (Host): PNY GeForce GT 710

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  3. diego 03

    Edito video, juego videojuegos y uso software demandante y varias aplicaciones a la vez, simplemente no se detiene, puede con todo y por eso fue que lo compre, me es muy útil y no gasta tanta energía. Son 12 núcleos y 24 hilos, supongo que estará vigente mucho tiempo.

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  4. Wagner Bitencourt Rebello

    Ótimo desempenho, mas prepare-se para comprar um bom kit de refrigeração pois esquenta que é uma churrasqueira, outro ponto é que se você utiliza-lo em conjunto com um Water-Cooler provavelmente terá de ter uma refrigeração EXCEPCIONAL nas VRMs pois elas irão sofrer com o alto consumo de corrente que o processador terá pelo Boost em tempo excessivo.

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  5. Scott

    The question was: How many cores does one need?The answer is: As many as you can afford.This is my first venture into the world of AMD. I’ve always been a tried and true Intel supporter but things have changed in the computer world since my last build almost 9 years ago. It seems AMD is now the king of the hill. After doing some research it was clear to me that I needed to have the Ryzen 5900x. I installed the CPU into an MSI X570s Tomahawk board with 64gb DDR4 3200 RAM and an RTX 3060ti. This processor is a beast. The speed at which it works amazes me. Video efiting, game play, everything else. It just does it without hesitation.I had no issues installing it into my motherboard. My Arctic Feeze II 360 keeps it unbearably cool and so far it is tackling anything I toss at it. Great CPU.

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  6. Tommy

    Ich hab mir endlich den AMD Ryzen 9 5900X gegönnt und bin einfach nur sprachlos! Ich mein, ich wusste ja, dass der Prozessor gut ist, aber dass er SO krass ist, hätte ich nicht gedacht.Was mich so flasht:Gaming-Performance zum Niederknien: Ich zocke echt gerne und viel, und mit meinem alten Prozessor hatte ich manchmal echt Probleme. Ruckler, Lags, nervige Wartezeiten… Mit dem Ryzen 9 5900X ist das alles Geschichte! Egal welches Game ich zocke, alles läuft butterweich, selbst bei den höchsten Grafikeinstellungen. Ich hab jetzt so viele FPS, dass ich mir schon fast einen neuen Monitor kaufen muss, um das alles richtig genießen zu können.Multitasking? Kein Problem! Ich bin ja so jemand, der gerne tausend Sachen gleichzeitig macht. Zocken, nebenbei streamen, mit Freunden im Discord quatschen, und zwischendurch noch schnell ein YouTube-Video schauen. Mit meinem alten PC war das immer ein bisschen stressig, aber der Ryzen 9 5900X lacht sich darüber nur kaputt. Der packt einfach alles, ohne mit der Wimper zu zucken.Für die Zukunft gewappnet: Ich hab keine Lust, mir alle paar Jahre einen neuen PC zu kaufen. Deshalb war es mir wichtig, einen Prozessor zu haben, der auch in Zukunft noch mithalten kann. Und da bin ich mir beim Ryzen 9 5900X echt sicher. Mit seinen 12 Kernen und 24 Threads ist der so was von zukunftssicher, da kann kommen, was will.Cool bleiben: Ich hatte ja erst ein bisschen Angst, dass der Prozessor zu heiß wird, weil er so viel Power hat. Aber ich hab mir dann einen guten Kühler dazu gekauft und jetzt bleibt er selbst beim Zocken schön kühl. Kein Überhitzen, keine Abstürze, alles top!Einbau für Dummies: Ich bin echt kein PC-Experte, aber den Prozessor einzubauen war total easy. Einfach den alten raus, den neuen rein, Kühler drauf und fertig. Hat vielleicht 10 Minuten gedauert.Fazit:Leute, wenn ihr einen richtig geilen Prozessor sucht, der euch die nächsten Jahre treu begleiten wird, dann kann ich euch den AMD Ryzen 9 5900X nur wärmstens empfehlen. Der ist jeden Cent wert! Ich bin so froh, dass ich ihn mir gekauft hab.

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  7. gawdesign

    Best price to cpu speed and cores

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    AMD Ryzen 9 5900X 12-core, 24-Thread Unlocked Desktop Processor
    AMD Ryzen 9 5900X 12-core, 24-Thread Unlocked Desktop Processor

    $282.87

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