• Welcome to TechPowerUp Forums, Guest! Please check out our forum guidelines for info related to our community.

AMD Cuts Prices of its Ryzen 8000G Desktop APUs—8600G Now at $199

btarunr

Editor & Senior Moderator
Staff member
Joined
Oct 9, 2007
Messages
47,166 (7.56/day)
Location
Hyderabad, India
System Name RBMK-1000
Processor AMD Ryzen 7 5700G
Motherboard ASUS ROG Strix B450-E Gaming
Cooling DeepCool Gammax L240 V2
Memory 2x 8GB G.Skill Sniper X
Video Card(s) Palit GeForce RTX 2080 SUPER GameRock
Storage Western Digital Black NVMe 512GB
Display(s) BenQ 1440p 60 Hz 27-inch
Case Corsair Carbide 100R
Audio Device(s) ASUS SupremeFX S1220A
Power Supply Cooler Master MWE Gold 650W
Mouse ASUS ROG Strix Impact
Keyboard Gamdias Hermes E2
Software Windows 11 Pro
Prices of AMD Ryzen 8000G "Hawk Point" desktop APUs in the Socket AM5 package saw reductions over the week. The Ryzen 7 8700G, the fully unlocked part, is now available for $299, a $30 cut from its launch price of $329. Meanwhile, the Ryzen 5 8600G has now slipped under the $200-mark, with a $199 price-tag. The chip had originally launched at $229. Both these chips feature a 16 TOPS NPU, and are the first desktop processors that are capable of on-chip AI acceleration. Both processors are based on the 4 nm "Hawk Point" monolithic silicon, and feature "Zen 4" CPU cores. The 8700G packs an 8-core/16-thread CPU with an RDNA 3 iGPU that has 12 compute units (CU); while the 8600G is 6-core/12-thread, with an iGPU that has 8 CU.

Things get interesting with the Ryzen 5 8500G, which is now down to $159 from its launch price of $179. This new price makes the processor competitive with the 13th Gen Core i3 and the lower end of the Core i5 lineup. Unlike the other two 8000G series chips, the 8500G lacks an NPU, and is based on the 4 nm "Phoenix 2" silicon that has two "Zen 4" and four "Zen 4c" CPU cores for a 6-core/12-thread CPU configuration. Both kinds of cores share a 16 MB L3 cache. It has a heavily cut-down RDNA 3 iGPU with just 4 CU. The Ryzen 8000G desktop APU series only features PCIe Gen 4 (no Gen 5), which may not mean much for today's discrete GPUs, but limit your SSD upgrade path to Gen 4 (Gen 5 SSDs will be limited to 7 GB/s).



View at TechPowerUp Main Site | Source
 
Joined
Sep 6, 2013
Messages
3,307 (0.81/day)
Location
Athens, Greece
System Name 3 desktop systems: Gaming / Internet / HTPC
Processor Ryzen 5 5500 / Ryzen 5 4600G / FX 6300 (12 years latter got to see how bad Bulldozer is)
Motherboard MSI X470 Gaming Plus Max (1) / MSI X470 Gaming Plus Max (2) / Gigabyte GA-990XA-UD3
Cooling Νoctua U12S / Segotep T4 / Snowman M-T6
Memory 32GB - 16GB G.Skill RIPJAWS 3600+16GB G.Skill Aegis 3200 / 16GB JUHOR / 16GB Kingston 2400MHz (DDR3)
Video Card(s) ASRock RX 6600 + GT 710 (PhysX)/ Vega 7 integrated / Radeon RX 580
Storage NVMes, ONLY NVMes/ NVMes, SATA Storage / NVMe boot(Clover), SATA storage
Display(s) Philips 43PUS8857/12 UHD TV (120Hz, HDR, FreeSync Premium) ---- 19'' HP monitor + BlitzWolf BW-V5
Case Sharkoon Rebel 12 / CoolerMaster Elite 361 / Xigmatek Midguard
Audio Device(s) onboard
Power Supply Chieftec 850W / Silver Power 400W / Sharkoon 650W
Mouse CoolerMaster Devastator III Plus / CoolerMaster Devastator / Logitech
Keyboard CoolerMaster Devastator III Plus / CoolerMaster Devastator / Logitech
Software Windows 10 / Windows 10&Windows 11 / Windows 10
Prices need to make sense to the final consumer and that doesn't mean selling a slower model, for the price of a faster one plus a low end discrete GPU. APUs are slower compared to the equivalent Ryzen chips, because of fewer cache, lower frequencies, not to mention fewer PCIe lanes, if I am not mistaken. So R7 8700G should be selling at the same price as an R5 7700, R5 8600G should be selling as much as an R5 7600, R5 8500G the same price as a R5 7500 and R5 8300G the same price as an R3 7300, if there where such models in the last two examples.
 
Joined
Sep 27, 2018
Messages
76 (0.03/day)
System Name A COLD ONE
Processor i7 6700k @ 4.5ghz soon to be R7 3800X
Motherboard Asrock Z170 extreme 6 soon to be MSI X570 Pro Carbon Wifi
Cooling Full custom WC loop/ EK blocks & pumps / 300mm res / Hard lined / linked to external 560 x 80 rad.
Memory 16gb of 2400mhz ddr4 soon to be 32gb of 3600mhz ddr4
Video Card(s) MSI GTX 1080 EKWB Seahawk. soon to be RTX2070 super/RTX2080/Radeon XT series..........PRICE
Storage 1 x Samsung 500gb 970 Evo NVME/ 2 x 500gb Samsung SSD
Display(s) Dell Ultrasharp Curved 3440x1440
Case Heavily Modified Silverstone Fortress FT02
Audio Device(s) Asus Sound card
Power Supply Corsair HX1000i
Mouse Corsair M95
Keyboard Corsair K95
Software Windows 10 64bit home
The problem with 8600g isn't the price it's the lack of reasonably priced itx motherboards for making low powered PCs, HTPCs
 
Joined
Apr 16, 2010
Messages
3,600 (0.68/day)
Location
Portugal
System Name LenovoⓇ ThinkPad™ T430
Processor IntelⓇ Core™ i5-3210M processor (2 cores, 2.50GHz, 3MB cache), Intel Turbo Boost™ 2.0 (3.10GHz), HT™
Motherboard Lenovo 2344 (Mobile Intel QM77 Express Chipset)
Cooling Single-pipe heatsink + Delta fan
Memory 2x 8GB KingstonⓇ HyperX™ Impact 2133MHz DDR3L SO-DIMM
Video Card(s) Intel HD Graphics™ 4000 (GPU clk: 1100MHz, vRAM clk: 1066MHz)
Storage SamsungⓇ 860 EVO mSATA (250GB) + 850 EVO (500GB) SATA
Display(s) 14.0" (355mm) HD (1366x768) color, anti-glare, LED backlight, 200 nits, 16:9 aspect ratio, 300:1 co
Case ThinkPad Roll Cage (one-piece magnesium frame)
Audio Device(s) HD Audio, RealtekⓇ ALC3202 codec, DolbyⓇ Advanced Audio™ v2 / stereo speakers, 1W x 2
Power Supply ThinkPad 65W AC Adapter + ThinkPad Battery 70++ (9-cell)
Mouse TrackPointⓇ pointing device + UltraNav™, wide touchpad below keyboard + ThinkLight™
Keyboard 6-row, 84-key, ThinkVantage button, spill-resistant, multimedia Fn keys, LED backlight (PT Layout)
Software MicrosoftⓇ WindowsⓇ 10 x86-64 (22H2)
The problem with 8600g isn't the price it's the lack of reasonably priced itx motherboards for making low powered PCs, HTPCs
Precisely. It's the very same reason I don't recommend the current platform for HTPC, as any refurb mini desktop beats it totally in the cost factor.
 
Joined
Oct 29, 2016
Messages
109 (0.04/day)
The problem with 8600g isn't the price it's the lack of reasonably priced itx motherboards for making low powered PCs, HTPCs
This is my main issue as well. I do not see the point of an expensive ITX rig for my purposes.
 

Cheeseball

Not a Potato
Supporter
Joined
Jan 2, 2009
Messages
1,980 (0.34/day)
Location
Pittsburgh, PA
System Name Titan
Processor AMD Ryzen™ 7 7950X3D
Motherboard ASRock X870 Taichi Lite
Cooling Thermalright Phantom Spirit 120 EVO CPU
Memory TEAMGROUP T-Force Delta RGB 2x16GB DDR5-6000 CL30
Video Card(s) ASRock Radeon RX 7900 XTX 24 GB GDDR6 (MBA) / NVIDIA RTX 4090 Founder's Edition
Storage Crucial T500 2TB x 3
Display(s) LG 32GS95UE-B, ASUS ROG Swift OLED (PG27AQDP), LG C4 42" (OLED42C4PUA)
Case HYTE Hakos Baelz Y60
Audio Device(s) Kanto Audio YU2 and SUB8 Desktop Speakers and Subwoofer, Cloud Alpha Wireless
Power Supply Corsair SF1000L
Mouse Logitech Pro Superlight 2 (White), G303 Shroud Edition
Keyboard Wooting 60HE+ / 8BitDo Retro Mechanical Keyboard (N Edition) / NuPhy Air75 v2
VR HMD Occulus Quest 2 128GB
Software Windows 11 Pro 64-bit 23H2 Build 22631.4317
These prices are actually very good, especially if you're planning for a homelab or a fileserver. Because these are still monolithic, the idle power consumption (when the server has no load) with the APU alone is a nice 2W to 6W, equal to the Intel CPUs.

This makes the 8400G (4 CUs) really good for HEVC/H265 and AV1 transcoding, especially for Plex.
 
Joined
Jul 29, 2022
Messages
495 (0.60/day)
These prices are actually very good, especially if you're planning for a homelab or a fileserver. Because these are still monolithic, the idle power consumption (when the server has no load) with the APU alone is a nice 2W to 6W, equal to the Intel CPUs.

This makes the 8400G (4 CUs) really good for HEVC/H265 and AV1 transcoding, especially for Plex.
Are they really that low? Last time I checked, AMD CPUs did not support advanced C states, at best they go to C3, while Intel can go down to C10. There are reports of Intel builds going down as low as sub-10w for full i3 builds, but the best I can get out of my 5600G is around 28W (and that's with turbo clocks off, only one m.2 and one SATA drive, and a PSU that is very efficient at low loads).
 

Cheeseball

Not a Potato
Supporter
Joined
Jan 2, 2009
Messages
1,980 (0.34/day)
Location
Pittsburgh, PA
System Name Titan
Processor AMD Ryzen™ 7 7950X3D
Motherboard ASRock X870 Taichi Lite
Cooling Thermalright Phantom Spirit 120 EVO CPU
Memory TEAMGROUP T-Force Delta RGB 2x16GB DDR5-6000 CL30
Video Card(s) ASRock Radeon RX 7900 XTX 24 GB GDDR6 (MBA) / NVIDIA RTX 4090 Founder's Edition
Storage Crucial T500 2TB x 3
Display(s) LG 32GS95UE-B, ASUS ROG Swift OLED (PG27AQDP), LG C4 42" (OLED42C4PUA)
Case HYTE Hakos Baelz Y60
Audio Device(s) Kanto Audio YU2 and SUB8 Desktop Speakers and Subwoofer, Cloud Alpha Wireless
Power Supply Corsair SF1000L
Mouse Logitech Pro Superlight 2 (White), G303 Shroud Edition
Keyboard Wooting 60HE+ / 8BitDo Retro Mechanical Keyboard (N Edition) / NuPhy Air75 v2
VR HMD Occulus Quest 2 128GB
Software Windows 11 Pro 64-bit 23H2 Build 22631.4317
Are they really that low? Last time I checked, AMD CPUs did not support advanced C states, at best they go to C3, while Intel can go down to C10. There are reports of Intel builds going down as low as sub-10w for full i3 builds, but the best I can get out of my 5600G is around 28W (and that's with turbo clocks off, only one m.2 and one SATA drive, and a PSU that is very efficient at low loads).
Is that 28W total system power consumption (e.g. read from a Kill-A-Watt, Kasa EP25, built-in UPS meter, etc.) or is that the CPU TDP (package power) alone?

This is my 8700G at the moment (Plex running in the background, active RDP and whatever Windows 11 IoT crap is on): 1719016905043.png

The total system power is 22W at the moment (read using a TP-Link Kasa EP25). This is on:
ASRock B650M Pro RS WiFi
3 x Noctua 120mm fans
2 x 18 TB WD Reds HDDs
2 x SK Hynix 2TB P31 Gold NVMe
Thermalright Peerless Assassin 120
 
Joined
Jul 30, 2019
Messages
3,224 (1.68/day)
System Name Still not a thread ripper but pretty good.
Processor Ryzen 9 7950x, Thermal Grizzly AM5 Offset Mounting Kit, Thermal Grizzly Extreme Paste
Motherboard ASRock B650 LiveMixer (BIOS/UEFI version P3.08, AGESA 1.2.0.2)
Cooling EK-Quantum Velocity, EK-Quantum Reflection PC-O11, D5 PWM, EK-CoolStream PE 360, XSPC TX360
Memory Micron DDR5-5600 ECC Unbuffered Memory (2 sticks, 64GB, MTC20C2085S1EC56BD1) + JONSBO NF-1
Video Card(s) XFX Radeon RX 5700 & EK-Quantum Vector Radeon RX 5700 +XT & Backplate
Storage Samsung 4TB 980 PRO, 2 x Optane 905p 1.5TB (striped), AMD Radeon RAMDisk
Display(s) 2 x 4K LG 27UL600-W (and HUANUO Dual Monitor Mount)
Case Lian Li PC-O11 Dynamic Black (original model)
Audio Device(s) Corsair Commander Pro for Fans, RGB, & Temp Sensors (x4)
Power Supply Corsair RM750x
Mouse Logitech M575
Keyboard Corsair Strafe RGB MK.2
Software Windows 10 Professional (64bit)
Benchmark Scores RIP Ryzen 9 5950x, ASRock X570 Taichi (v1.06), 128GB Micron DDR4-3200 ECC UDIMM (18ASF4G72AZ-3G2F1)
Is that 28W total system power consumption (e.g. read from a Kill-A-Watt, Kasa EP25, built-in UPS meter, etc.) or is that the CPU TDP (package power) alone?

This is my 8700G at the moment (Plex running in the background, active RDP and whatever Windows 11 IoT crap is on):View attachment 352305

The total system power is 22W at the moment (read using a TP-Link Kasa EP25). This is on:
ASRock B650M Pro RS WiFi
3 x Noctua 120mm fans
2 x 18 TB WD Reds HDDs
2 x SK Hynix 2TB P31 Gold NVMe
Thermalright Peerless Assassin 120
For comparison total system power my AM4 2200g DeskMini X300 would sleep <5 watts in Windows with Wake on LAN. On Linux it idles about 20 watts with plex server running in the background (1 NVMe + 1 SATA) haven't figured out how to get the system to sleep in Linux yet.
 
Joined
May 3, 2018
Messages
2,881 (1.21/day)
And what did I say the other day about AMD. Typical AMD, launch high, wait a few weeks, panic, cut prices, anger early adopters. Rinse repeat. Soon to be repeated with Zen 5.
 
Joined
Jul 30, 2019
Messages
3,224 (1.68/day)
System Name Still not a thread ripper but pretty good.
Processor Ryzen 9 7950x, Thermal Grizzly AM5 Offset Mounting Kit, Thermal Grizzly Extreme Paste
Motherboard ASRock B650 LiveMixer (BIOS/UEFI version P3.08, AGESA 1.2.0.2)
Cooling EK-Quantum Velocity, EK-Quantum Reflection PC-O11, D5 PWM, EK-CoolStream PE 360, XSPC TX360
Memory Micron DDR5-5600 ECC Unbuffered Memory (2 sticks, 64GB, MTC20C2085S1EC56BD1) + JONSBO NF-1
Video Card(s) XFX Radeon RX 5700 & EK-Quantum Vector Radeon RX 5700 +XT & Backplate
Storage Samsung 4TB 980 PRO, 2 x Optane 905p 1.5TB (striped), AMD Radeon RAMDisk
Display(s) 2 x 4K LG 27UL600-W (and HUANUO Dual Monitor Mount)
Case Lian Li PC-O11 Dynamic Black (original model)
Audio Device(s) Corsair Commander Pro for Fans, RGB, & Temp Sensors (x4)
Power Supply Corsair RM750x
Mouse Logitech M575
Keyboard Corsair Strafe RGB MK.2
Software Windows 10 Professional (64bit)
Benchmark Scores RIP Ryzen 9 5950x, ASRock X570 Taichi (v1.06), 128GB Micron DDR4-3200 ECC UDIMM (18ASF4G72AZ-3G2F1)
And what did I say the other day about AMD. Typical AMD, launch high, wait a few weeks, panic, cut prices, anger early adopters. Rinse repeat. Soon to be repeated with Zen 5.
I'm going to wait for the sweet discounts .
 
Joined
Feb 19, 2009
Messages
1,161 (0.20/day)
Location
I live in Norway
Processor R9 5800x3d | R7 3900X | 4800H | 2x Xeon gold 6142
Motherboard Asrock X570M | AB350M Pro 4 | Asus Tuf A15
Cooling Air | Air | duh laptop
Memory 64gb G.skill SniperX @3600 CL16 | 128gb | 32GB | 192gb
Video Card(s) RTX 4080 |Quadro P5000 | RTX2060M
Storage Many drives
Display(s) AW3423dwf.
Case Jonsbo D41
Power Supply Corsair RM850x
Mouse g502 Lightspeed
Keyboard G913 tkl
Software win11, proxmox
These prices are actually very good, especially if you're planning for a homelab or a fileserver. Because these are still monolithic, the idle power consumption (when the server has no load) with the APU alone is a nice 2W to 6W, equal to the Intel CPUs.

This makes the 8400G (4 CUs) really good for HEVC/H265 and AV1 transcoding, especially for Plex.

sadly amd encoder for rdna3.. so if you transcode to 1080P av1 doesn't work (hardware bug), it works for 4K though.
X265 is okey at higher bitrates but you kinda end up at a position where intel is better for that if you care about transcoding.
 

Cheeseball

Not a Potato
Supporter
Joined
Jan 2, 2009
Messages
1,980 (0.34/day)
Location
Pittsburgh, PA
System Name Titan
Processor AMD Ryzen™ 7 7950X3D
Motherboard ASRock X870 Taichi Lite
Cooling Thermalright Phantom Spirit 120 EVO CPU
Memory TEAMGROUP T-Force Delta RGB 2x16GB DDR5-6000 CL30
Video Card(s) ASRock Radeon RX 7900 XTX 24 GB GDDR6 (MBA) / NVIDIA RTX 4090 Founder's Edition
Storage Crucial T500 2TB x 3
Display(s) LG 32GS95UE-B, ASUS ROG Swift OLED (PG27AQDP), LG C4 42" (OLED42C4PUA)
Case HYTE Hakos Baelz Y60
Audio Device(s) Kanto Audio YU2 and SUB8 Desktop Speakers and Subwoofer, Cloud Alpha Wireless
Power Supply Corsair SF1000L
Mouse Logitech Pro Superlight 2 (White), G303 Shroud Edition
Keyboard Wooting 60HE+ / 8BitDo Retro Mechanical Keyboard (N Edition) / NuPhy Air75 v2
VR HMD Occulus Quest 2 128GB
Software Windows 11 Pro 64-bit 23H2 Build 22631.4317
sadly amd encoder for rdna3.. so if you transcode to 1080P av1 doesn't work (hardware bug), it works for 4K though.
X265 is okey at higher bitrates but you kinda end up at a position where intel is better for that if you care about transcoding.
Yup, I know about the 1082p issue. It works but you will get black bars on output.
 
Joined
Feb 20, 2019
Messages
8,188 (3.93/day)
System Name Bragging Rights
Processor Atom Z3735F 1.33GHz
Motherboard It has no markings but it's green
Cooling No, it's a 2.2W processor
Memory 2GB DDR3L-1333
Video Card(s) Gen7 Intel HD (4EU @ 311MHz)
Storage 32GB eMMC and 128GB Sandisk Extreme U3
Display(s) 10" IPS 1280x800 60Hz
Case Veddha T2
Audio Device(s) Apparently, yes
Power Supply Samsung 18W 5V fast-charger
Mouse MX Anywhere 2
Keyboard Logitech MX Keys (not Cherry MX at all)
VR HMD Samsung Oddyssey, not that I'd plug it into this though....
Software W10 21H1, barely
Benchmark Scores I once clocked a Celeron-300A to 564MHz on an Abit BE6 and it scored over 9000.
AMD has spent a decade boasting, and proving that its large caches are important; The more cache the better the CPU.

"Oh, also here are our mobile parts shoehorned into a desktop socket, with dramatically lowered cache counts."

They suck as desktop parts and really need to be even cheaper to be appealing to the mass market. They're last-gen performance tier which is a problem because last gen parts are still on sale at a lower price still and have the additional advantage of a cheaper platform. Unless you really can't fit a dGPU in and you need that IGP they're a solution looking for a problem.

Maybe there aren't many of these to sell in the first place, since they're likely laptop part rejects that failed to hit the voltage/efficiency curve needed for laptop parts - so AMD can afford to squeeze the highest price out of them due to low supply?
 
Joined
Oct 29, 2016
Messages
109 (0.04/day)
And what did I say the other day about AMD. Typical AMD, launch high, wait a few weeks, panic, cut prices, anger early adopters. Rinse repeat. Soon to be repeated with Zen 5.
I heard they were planning to price Zenny 5 lower than 4 at launch? I hope they do.
 
Joined
Jun 2, 2017
Messages
8,969 (3.31/day)
System Name Best AMD Computer
Processor AMD 7900X3D
Motherboard Asus X670E E Strix
Cooling In Win SR36
Memory GSKILL DDR5 32GB 5200 30
Video Card(s) Sapphire Pulse 7900XT (Watercooled)
Storage Corsair MP 700, Seagate 530 2Tb, Adata SX8200 2TBx2, Kingston 2 TBx2, Micron 8 TB, WD AN 1500
Display(s) GIGABYTE FV43U
Case Corsair 7000D Airflow
Audio Device(s) Corsair Void Pro, Logitch Z523 5.1
Power Supply Deepcool 1000M
Mouse Logitech g7 gaming mouse
Keyboard Logitech G510
Software Windows 11 Pro 64 Steam. GOG, Uplay, Origin
Benchmark Scores Firestrike: 46183 Time Spy: 25121
AMD has spent a decade boasting, and proving that its large caches are important; The more cache the better the CPU.

"Oh, also here are our mobile parts shoehorned into a desktop socket, with dramatically lowered cache counts."

They suck as desktop parts and really need to be even cheaper to be appealing to the mass market. They're last-gen performance tier which is a problem because last gen parts are still on sale at a lower price still and have the additional advantage of a cheaper platform. Unless you really can't fit a dGPU in and you need that IGP they're a solution looking for a problem.

Maybe there aren't many of these to sell in the first place, since they're likely laptop part rejects that failed to hit the voltage/efficiency curve needed for laptop parts - so AMD can afford to squeeze the highest price out of them due to low supply?
The biggest issue with these chips is platform cost. AM4 was around for so long that I am sure that some of us still have anything from B350 to X570 boards lying around somewhere. These are faster than any of the AM4 APUs by some measure but adding a 6500XT to existing AM4 is cheaper and not a worry to make sure the board supports 120HZ from HDMI or DP. That is the thing with AMD APUs. I have my 5600G in a Asus AP201 case that is Micro ATX with a As Rock Riptide B550 as it is one of the only boards that supports 120hz on the HDMI port. It has a clone of one of those retro ROM drives you can buy on Amazon and it is impressive.

I have priced a build and the lowest spec MB, RAM and CPU would still be in the range of $550-600 CAD using an AM5 APU. I know we wanted our own to make our own handheld clones with unlocked APUs but these are still $100 too much. If a Steam Deck is $439 where I live the APU alone should be max $199 CAD. I guess AMD do not have enough of these to offer them at better prices for now but every new node TSMC achieves makes the previous node(s) cheaper.

The MBs have not reduced in price. The hope is that when the X870 boards are in store it will put pressure on X670-A620 but the only thing they seem to marketing for those boards is USB4 that is not even a thing for most people. I mean am I going to hook up an external GPU to my PC? That means that we have not seen the drastic cuts in price we usually see in the old stock when the new boards launch. You will not find a good B550 for $50 where I live.
 
Joined
Feb 20, 2019
Messages
8,188 (3.93/day)
System Name Bragging Rights
Processor Atom Z3735F 1.33GHz
Motherboard It has no markings but it's green
Cooling No, it's a 2.2W processor
Memory 2GB DDR3L-1333
Video Card(s) Gen7 Intel HD (4EU @ 311MHz)
Storage 32GB eMMC and 128GB Sandisk Extreme U3
Display(s) 10" IPS 1280x800 60Hz
Case Veddha T2
Audio Device(s) Apparently, yes
Power Supply Samsung 18W 5V fast-charger
Mouse MX Anywhere 2
Keyboard Logitech MX Keys (not Cherry MX at all)
VR HMD Samsung Oddyssey, not that I'd plug it into this though....
Software W10 21H1, barely
Benchmark Scores I once clocked a Celeron-300A to 564MHz on an Abit BE6 and it scored over 9000.
The MBs have not reduced in price. The hope is that when the X870 boards are in store it will put pressure on X670-A620 but the only thing they seem to marketing for those boards is USB4 that is not even a thing for most people. I mean am I going to hook up an external GPU to my PC? That means that we have not seen the drastic cuts in price we usually see in the old stock when the new boards launch. You will not find a good B550 for $50 where I live.
B550 is still holding its price, likely because PCIe 4.0 matters both for gimped x8 lane CPUs, and also even affordable SSDs are now bottlenecked by PCIe 3.0

I've read, watched, asked (and been told) that two factors are making new platforms more expensive:
  1. New PCIe generations require more PCB layers, better shielding, and higher-quality than the prior generation. We saw that with the cost increase from 400-series chipsets to 500-series chipsets, and also with the increasing price hikes for PCIe riser cables, and the increasing number of complaints arising from cheaper PCIe 4.0 riser cables causing problems or not working in 4.0 mode.

  2. VRMs now need to handle 230W PPTs for stock AM5 support without caveats. It's a significant step up from the 142W of AM4 and even cheaper B650 boards tend to have VRMs and power delivery matching high-end X570 boards from the previous generation.
A620 could come down in price, but they've likely been unpopular, ergo lower volume and therefore fewer economies of scale, due to a lack of any budget AM5 parts until very recently. The cheapest 65W-only A620 boards ought to be on par with the cheapest 65W-only B550 boards since the lane count, PCIe generation, and VRMs needed should be comparable to something like these paltry entry-tier B550 boards:

1719067909615.png

I'm not saying they're good boards, but they do exist en-masse and they are what people throw APUs into.
 
Joined
Jun 2, 2017
Messages
8,969 (3.31/day)
System Name Best AMD Computer
Processor AMD 7900X3D
Motherboard Asus X670E E Strix
Cooling In Win SR36
Memory GSKILL DDR5 32GB 5200 30
Video Card(s) Sapphire Pulse 7900XT (Watercooled)
Storage Corsair MP 700, Seagate 530 2Tb, Adata SX8200 2TBx2, Kingston 2 TBx2, Micron 8 TB, WD AN 1500
Display(s) GIGABYTE FV43U
Case Corsair 7000D Airflow
Audio Device(s) Corsair Void Pro, Logitch Z523 5.1
Power Supply Deepcool 1000M
Mouse Logitech g7 gaming mouse
Keyboard Logitech G510
Software Windows 11 Pro 64 Steam. GOG, Uplay, Origin
Benchmark Scores Firestrike: 46183 Time Spy: 25121
B550 is still holding its price, likely because PCIe 4.0 matters both for gimped x8 lane CPUs, and also even affordable SSDs are now bottlenecked by PCIe 3.0

I've read, watched, asked (and been told) that two factors are making new platforms more expensive:
  1. New PCIe generations require more PCB layers, better shielding, and higher-quality than the prior generation. We saw that with the cost increase from 400-series chipsets to 500-series chipsets, and also with the increasing price hikes for PCIe riser cables, and the increasing number of complaints arising from cheaper PCIe 4.0 riser cables causing problems or not working in 4.0 mode.

  2. VRMs now need to handle 230W PPTs for stock AM5 support without caveats. It's a significant step up from the 142W of AM4 and even cheaper B650 boards tend to have VRMs and power delivery matching high-end X570 boards from the previous generation.
A620 could come down in price, but they've likely been unpopular, ergo lower volume and therefore fewer economies of scale, due to a lack of any budget AM5 parts until very recently. The cheapest 65W-only A620 boards ought to be on par with the cheapest 65W-only B550 boards since the lane count, PCIe generation, and VRMs needed should be comparable to something like these paltry entry-tier B550 boards:

View attachment 352335

I'm not saying they're good boards, but they do exist en-masse and they are what people throw APUs into.
Exactly. that was what I did when I was looking at AM5
 
Joined
Feb 1, 2019
Messages
3,518 (1.67/day)
Location
UK, Midlands
System Name Main PC
Processor 13700k
Motherboard Asrock Z690 Steel Legend D4 - Bios 13.02
Cooling Noctua NH-D15S
Memory 32 Gig 3200CL14
Video Card(s) 4080 RTX SUPER FE 16G
Storage 1TB 980 PRO, 2TB SN850X, 2TB DC P4600, 1TB 860 EVO, 2x 3TB WD Red, 2x 4TB WD Red
Display(s) LG 27GL850
Case Fractal Define R4
Audio Device(s) Soundblaster AE-9
Power Supply Antec HCG 750 Gold
Software Windows 10 21H2 LTSC
This is why its better to wait towards the latter part of a gen's life, they tend to be overpriced early on.
 
Joined
May 3, 2018
Messages
2,881 (1.21/day)
I heard they were planning to price Zenny 5 lower than 4 at launch? I hope they do.
Leaked pricing shows similar prices to Zen 4 except 9950X is cheper than 7950X. 9600X is way too dear if the leaks are true.
 
Joined
Feb 20, 2019
Messages
8,188 (3.93/day)
System Name Bragging Rights
Processor Atom Z3735F 1.33GHz
Motherboard It has no markings but it's green
Cooling No, it's a 2.2W processor
Memory 2GB DDR3L-1333
Video Card(s) Gen7 Intel HD (4EU @ 311MHz)
Storage 32GB eMMC and 128GB Sandisk Extreme U3
Display(s) 10" IPS 1280x800 60Hz
Case Veddha T2
Audio Device(s) Apparently, yes
Power Supply Samsung 18W 5V fast-charger
Mouse MX Anywhere 2
Keyboard Logitech MX Keys (not Cherry MX at all)
VR HMD Samsung Oddyssey, not that I'd plug it into this though....
Software W10 21H1, barely
Benchmark Scores I once clocked a Celeron-300A to 564MHz on an Abit BE6 and it scored over 9000.
Leaked pricing shows similar prices to Zen 4 except 9950X is cheper than 7950X. 9600X is way too dear if the leaks are true.
the 1600X, 2600X, 3600X, and 5600X have always been shit value.

People almost always bought the 1600, 1600AF, 2600, 3600, and 5600 instead - which were basically the exact same chip for ~25% less money. Sure, on the box it said 65W instead of 105W but that only affects the default power limits. I never found an x600 chip that couldn't hit the same advertised boost clocks as it's x600X counterpart - I suspect some exist but they're probably silicon lottery outliers.
 
Joined
Jul 30, 2019
Messages
3,224 (1.68/day)
System Name Still not a thread ripper but pretty good.
Processor Ryzen 9 7950x, Thermal Grizzly AM5 Offset Mounting Kit, Thermal Grizzly Extreme Paste
Motherboard ASRock B650 LiveMixer (BIOS/UEFI version P3.08, AGESA 1.2.0.2)
Cooling EK-Quantum Velocity, EK-Quantum Reflection PC-O11, D5 PWM, EK-CoolStream PE 360, XSPC TX360
Memory Micron DDR5-5600 ECC Unbuffered Memory (2 sticks, 64GB, MTC20C2085S1EC56BD1) + JONSBO NF-1
Video Card(s) XFX Radeon RX 5700 & EK-Quantum Vector Radeon RX 5700 +XT & Backplate
Storage Samsung 4TB 980 PRO, 2 x Optane 905p 1.5TB (striped), AMD Radeon RAMDisk
Display(s) 2 x 4K LG 27UL600-W (and HUANUO Dual Monitor Mount)
Case Lian Li PC-O11 Dynamic Black (original model)
Audio Device(s) Corsair Commander Pro for Fans, RGB, & Temp Sensors (x4)
Power Supply Corsair RM750x
Mouse Logitech M575
Keyboard Corsair Strafe RGB MK.2
Software Windows 10 Professional (64bit)
Benchmark Scores RIP Ryzen 9 5950x, ASRock X570 Taichi (v1.06), 128GB Micron DDR4-3200 ECC UDIMM (18ASF4G72AZ-3G2F1)
the 1600X, 2600X, 3600X, and 5600X have always been shit value.

People almost always bought the 1600, 1600AF, 2600, 3600, and 5600 instead - which were basically the exact same chip for ~25% less money. Sure, on the box it said 65W instead of 105W but that only affects the default power limits. I never found an x600 chip that couldn't hit the same advertised boost clocks as it's x600X counterpart - I suspect some exist but they're probably silicon lottery outliers.
It kinda irks me AMD named the lesser 5950x as 5900XT instead of just a 5950. I mean that would have at least made some sense I think.
 
Joined
Feb 20, 2019
Messages
8,188 (3.93/day)
System Name Bragging Rights
Processor Atom Z3735F 1.33GHz
Motherboard It has no markings but it's green
Cooling No, it's a 2.2W processor
Memory 2GB DDR3L-1333
Video Card(s) Gen7 Intel HD (4EU @ 311MHz)
Storage 32GB eMMC and 128GB Sandisk Extreme U3
Display(s) 10" IPS 1280x800 60Hz
Case Veddha T2
Audio Device(s) Apparently, yes
Power Supply Samsung 18W 5V fast-charger
Mouse MX Anywhere 2
Keyboard Logitech MX Keys (not Cherry MX at all)
VR HMD Samsung Oddyssey, not that I'd plug it into this though....
Software W10 21H1, barely
Benchmark Scores I once clocked a Celeron-300A to 564MHz on an Abit BE6 and it scored over 9000.
It kinda irks me AMD named the lesser 5950x as 5900XT instead of just a 5950. I mean that would have at least made some sense I think.
It could just be a typo.

Let's face it, if XT is supposed to be the top bin, then 5950XT should be the only 16-core factory OC model. There shouldn't be two of them, and that leaves no top bin for the 12-core model.
 
Joined
Jul 29, 2022
Messages
495 (0.60/day)
Is that 28W total system power consumption (e.g. read from a Kill-A-Watt, Kasa EP25, built-in UPS meter, etc.) or is that the CPU TDP (package power) alone?

This is my 8700G at the moment (Plex running in the background, active RDP and whatever Windows 11 IoT crap is on):View attachment 352305

The total system power is 22W at the moment (read using a TP-Link Kasa EP25). This is on:
ASRock B650M Pro RS WiFi
3 x Noctua 120mm fans
2 x 18 TB WD Reds HDDs
2 x SK Hynix 2TB P31 Gold NVMe
Thermalright Peerless Assassin 120
Measured from the wall, duh. The sensor info is not really useful since you have to factor on RAM, all the motherboard components (chipset, vrms, lan, audio, etc), the chipset alone is like 6W.
I believe the setup I used was Asrock B450m Pro4 R2.0, Ryzen 2200GE, 16gb RAM (2x8, Kingston HyperX I think, forgot which speed but probably 3200), Intel 330 sata ssd, stock cooler, Be Quiet Pure Power 11 500W Gold, and nothing else connected to the motherboard. Memory was set to 1.2V with lower speeds and the CPU had PBO disabled. This got me 28W measured from the wall. Maybe a more expensive power supply can get this lower, but most platinum rated power supplies don't come in low enough wattage for the efficiency to increase at low loads (highest ~20W efficiency I ever saw was the Corsair SF450 Platinum, and that has been EOL for a while now, the new lineup they introduced just now start at 750W).
I don't remember exactly how much my B550M + 5600G uses with nothing connected, I haven't measured that, the last measurement I did was 32W but that was with 4 fans and a 10GbE card so realistically it should hit as low as ~25W.

However both of those are a far cry from intel systems that can go sub-10W in idle.

The ASRock B650M Pro RS is the board I was eyeballing for a while now, since it had the most m.2 slots for matx. Good to see it doesn't use much power. I'm considering switching into that system hopefully later this year.
Note though that if you have the fans speed controlled then they most likely use less than 2W combined and if the HDDs are in sleep then they also use less than 2W... so 18W for the full system, still pretty good.
 

Cheeseball

Not a Potato
Supporter
Joined
Jan 2, 2009
Messages
1,980 (0.34/day)
Location
Pittsburgh, PA
System Name Titan
Processor AMD Ryzen™ 7 7950X3D
Motherboard ASRock X870 Taichi Lite
Cooling Thermalright Phantom Spirit 120 EVO CPU
Memory TEAMGROUP T-Force Delta RGB 2x16GB DDR5-6000 CL30
Video Card(s) ASRock Radeon RX 7900 XTX 24 GB GDDR6 (MBA) / NVIDIA RTX 4090 Founder's Edition
Storage Crucial T500 2TB x 3
Display(s) LG 32GS95UE-B, ASUS ROG Swift OLED (PG27AQDP), LG C4 42" (OLED42C4PUA)
Case HYTE Hakos Baelz Y60
Audio Device(s) Kanto Audio YU2 and SUB8 Desktop Speakers and Subwoofer, Cloud Alpha Wireless
Power Supply Corsair SF1000L
Mouse Logitech Pro Superlight 2 (White), G303 Shroud Edition
Keyboard Wooting 60HE+ / 8BitDo Retro Mechanical Keyboard (N Edition) / NuPhy Air75 v2
VR HMD Occulus Quest 2 128GB
Software Windows 11 Pro 64-bit 23H2 Build 22631.4317
Measured from the wall, duh. The sensor info is not really useful since you have to factor on RAM, all the motherboard components (chipset, vrms, lan, audio, etc), the chipset alone is like 6W.
I believe the setup I used was Asrock B450m Pro4 R2.0, Ryzen 2200GE, 16gb RAM (2x8, Kingston HyperX I think, forgot which speed but probably 3200), Intel 330 sata ssd, stock cooler, Be Quiet Pure Power 11 500W Gold, and nothing else connected to the motherboard. Memory was set to 1.2V with lower speeds and the CPU had PBO disabled. This got me 28W measured from the wall. Maybe a more expensive power supply can get this lower, but most platinum rated power supplies don't come in low enough wattage for the efficiency to increase at low loads (highest ~20W efficiency I ever saw was the Corsair SF450 Platinum, and that has been EOL for a while now, the new lineup they introduced just now start at 750W).
I don't remember exactly how much my B550M + 5600G uses with nothing connected, I haven't measured that, the last measurement I did was 32W but that was with 4 fans and a 10GbE card so realistically it should hit as low as ~25W.

However both of those are a far cry from intel systems that can go sub-10W in idle.

The ASRock B650M Pro RS is the board I was eyeballing for a while now, since it had the most m.2 slots for matx. Good to see it doesn't use much power. I'm considering switching into that system hopefully later this year.
Note though that if you have the fans speed controlled then they most likely use less than 2W combined and if the HDDs are in sleep then they also use less than 2W... so 18W for the full system, still pretty good.
Yeah, just wanted to double-check. I have had discussions with people who had the chiplet CPUs and saying that they only get 25W to 45W (5800X) total system power draw on idle or low usage when in fact that was just the TDP of the CPU alone. :roll:

ASRock B650M Pro RS WiFi is a good semi-budget (I was able to get it for $120 on a sale) board if you need 3 NVMe slots. However, take note that one of them is PCI-E 4.0 x2 and the only has a 8+2+1 power phase design, which is perfectly fine for a 65W TDP CPU/APU. The HDMI port is also 2.1-compliant as it can do 2160p144.
 
Top