Testseek.es han recogido 214 las revisiones expertas de el AMD Ryzen 9 3900X 3.8GHz Socket AM4 y el grado medio es el 92%. Enrolle abajo y vea todas las revisiones para AMD Ryzen 9 3900X 3.8GHz Socket AM4.
July 2019
(92%)
214 Críticas
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A los editores les gusta
Mejora importante de rendimiento por ciclo de reloj
Mantienen el mismo socket que las generaciones anteriores
Diseño escalable mediante chiplets
Mejoras en el controlador de memoria y mas cache L3
Soportan PCI Express 4.0
Destrozan a sus alternativas
Brutal rendimiento multinúcleo
Notable mejora del IPC frente a la generación previa
Temperaturas y consumo muy buenos
Compatible con placas base de generación previa con buen VRM
Un rendimiento sistemáticamente bueno del sistema
Excelente rendimiento en juegos
12 núcleos y 24 hilos
Eficiente en el consumo de energía
Preparado para el futuro
PCI Express 4.0
Refrigerador de stock con estilo
Todavía usando el zócalo AM4
Espa
12 núcleos
Temperaturas excelentes
Gran rendimiento gaming y profesional
Precio excelente
Zen 2 y litografÍa de 7nm
Rendimiento y nÚcleos
Consumo y temperaturas
Ideal para multitarea
Procesador calidad / precio
A los editores no les gusta
Seguimos echando de menos algo más de capacidad de overclocking
Sigue sin destronar a Intel en gaming
Las latencias de las memorias siguen sin ir finas
Especificación TDP poco fiable
Plataforma X570 relativamente cara
Comparativamente caro en el momento de su lanzamiento según los estándares de AMD
PCIe 4.0 sólo con el chipset X570
La nevera de stock se pone ruidosa bajo carga
Altas temperaturas en
Nulo overclock
Bios verdes
Pobre rendimiento en las RAMs
– disipador de stock va muy justo. hace mucho ruido
Publicación: 2019-07-07, Autor: W1zzard , crítica de: techpowerup.com
Our first impressions with 3rd generation Ryzen's memory overclocking capabilities are very optimistic. The processor is capable of memory frequencies well beyond the DDR4-3600 most 2nd generation Ryzen chips cap out at as stability of the Infinity Fabri...
12-cores, 24-threads on the mainstream platform, Easily beats the Core i9-9900K in multi-core workloads, Better single-core and gaming performance than previous generation, AMD Gamecache, CPU cooler included, Pretty easy to overclock, X570 motherboards a
None that we found
So the Ryzen 3000 series is here! Even if you aren't an AMD fan this launch just seems to have something special about it. AMD has increased core counts, speeds, and has added new things that will actually bring you more performance. It seems that if you...
Publicación: 2019-07-07, Autor: Sebastian , crítica de: pcper.com
Zen 2 is finally here, and these new Ryzen processors fulfill much of the promise of the next generation of AMD CPUs on 7nm. So far we have tested the Ryzen 7 3700X and Ryzen 9 3900X, and both make a compelling case if you're looking to upgrade or build u...
Publicación: 2019-07-07, Autor: Michael , crítica de: phoronix.com
So as compelling as the performance is for the AMD 3700X/3900X, if you are a Linux user wanting to run a bleeding-edge distribution you may want to hold off on purchasing this new hardware until hearing more on Phoronix. But if you want to use the likes o...
Publicación: 2019-07-07, Autor: W1zzard , crítica de: techpowerup.com
At the outset, we offer our profound gratitude to AMD for offering backwards compatibility for its 3rd generation Ryzen processors on motherboards that were designed way back in 2016. Motherboard designers back then would not have anticipated CPU core co...
Publicación: 2019-07-07, Autor: Steven , crítica de: techspot.com
Resumen: It's finally time to review AMD's new 3rd-gen Ryzen processors. On hand today we have the Ryzen 9 3900X and Ryzen 7 3700X, with more content to come in the next few days. AMD decided to release and lift the review embargo on both Zen 2 and Radeon Navi at...
Publicación: 2019-07-07, Autor: Marco , crítica de: hothardware.com
Great Performance, Relatively Low Power, Many Overclocking Options, Improved IPC and Latency, Competitive Pricing
Higher Idle Power, Wide X570 Pricing, Single-Thread Still Just Behind Intel
Performance versus Intel is more of a mixed bag, but the Ryzen 3000 series still looks strong. Single-thread performance is roughly on-par with Intel's Coffee Lake based Core i9-9900K, depending on the workload. Although it is tight, Intel still has a sma...
Publicación: 2019-07-07, Autor: Tom , crítica de: overclock3d.net
The Zen 2 and Ryzen 3rd Generation definitely fall into two camps when it comes to summing them up.Firstly AMD have, for a long time, been slowly solving the heat and power problems that plagued their CPU releases for some time. The first Ryzen release wa...
Publicación: 2019-07-07, Autor: Shawn , crítica de: overclockers.com
Both CPUs behaved nearly identical when it came to voltage requirements. They were both stable at 4.35 GHz, the 3900X needed slightly less voltage at 1.4 V where the 3700X needed just a touch more up to 1.45 V. The happy medium was found to be 4.2 GHz whe...
The eight-core 16-thread Ryzen 7 3700X slots in as solid performer for the mainstream that offers incredible power efficiency paired with powerful performance. The fully unlocked processor also supports the PCIe 4.0 interface and comes with a beefy Wr...