

🔥 Power your productivity and play with Ryzen 9 5900X — the ultimate AM4 beast!
The AMD Ryzen 9 5900X is a high-performance desktop processor featuring 12 cores and 24 threads, a massive 70MB cache, and a base clock of 3.7 GHz that boosts up to 4.8 GHz. Designed for the AM4 socket and 500 series chipset motherboards, it supports DDR4 memory up to 3200 MHz and PCIe Gen 4 for cutting-edge connectivity. Ideal for professionals and gamers seeking top-tier multitasking and speed, it requires a separate cooling solution and graphics card.





| ASIN | B08164VTWH |
| Are Batteries Included | No |
| Batteries | 1 A batteries required. |
| Best Sellers Rank | #62,945 in Computers & Accessories ( See Top 100 in Computers & Accessories ) #197 in Processors |
| Brand | AMD |
| Computer Memory Type | DIMM |
| Country of Origin | India |
| Customer Reviews | 4.7 4.7 out of 5 stars (12,899) |
| Date First Available | 13 October 2020 |
| Generic Name | Processor |
| Graphics Card Interface | PCI Express 4.0 |
| Item Dimensions LxWxH | 40 x 40 x 6 Millimeters |
| Item Height | 6 Millimeters |
| Item Weight | 79.2 g |
| Item Width | 40 Millimeters |
| Item model number | AMD Ryzen 9 5900X |
| Lithium Battery Energy Content | 2.6 British Thermal Units (BTUs) |
| Lithium Battery Weight | 0.5 Milligrams |
| Manufacturer | AMD |
| Memory Clock Speed | 3200 MHz |
| Memory Technology | DDR4 |
| Net Quantity | 1 Pack |
| Number of Lithium Ion Cells | 7 |
| Number of Lithium Metal Cells | 7 |
| Packer | AMD India Pvt. Ltd,Plot No. 102,103 Export Promotion Industrial Park, Whitefield Bangalore - 560066 |
| Processor Brand | AMD |
| Processor Count | 12 |
| Processor Socket | Socket AM4 |
| Processor Speed | 3.7 GHz |
| Processor Type | Ryzen 9 |
| Product Dimensions | 4 x 4 x 0.6 cm; 79.38 g |
| Series | AMD Ryzen 9 5900X |
| Wattage | 105 Watts |
A**H
Performance Power House for AM4 Socket
**Value for Money:** 5/5 The AMD Ryzen 9 5900X is an absolute powerhouse of a processor, and its value for money is unmatched. I was blown away by the performance boost it brought to my system compared to my previous Ryzen 2600X. **Great Delivery by Amazon:** 5/5 Kudos to Amazon for their lightning-fast delivery! My processor arrived in perfect condition and within the estimated time frame, which is always a plus. **Performance:** 5/5 The Ryzen 9 5900X is a beast of a processor. Idle CPU usage was reduced from around 10% on my previous processor to an astonishing 1-2%. This means that your system will be even more efficient and quiet when not in use. In terms of actual performance, I noticed significant frame rates and render times improvements in gaming and content creation. **Heat Management:** 4/5 While the Ryzen 9 5900X is incredibly powerful, it does generate a bit more heat than expected. I saw temperatures ranging from around 55°C to 60°C during idle periods. If you plan on using this processor for heavy workloads or gaming sessions, I highly recommend investing in a quality CPU cooler to keep things running smoothly. **Important Note:** It's worth noting that the Ryzen 9 5900X does not come with a CPU fan included (I used an Evo cooler). This is mentioned in the product description, so be sure to factor this into your overall cost and planning. In conclusion, the AMD Ryzen 9 5900X is an excellent choice for those seeking a powerful processor without breaking the bank. With great performance, efficient idle usage, and fast delivery from Amazon, it's hard not to recommend this product. Just keep in mind that you may need to invest in additional cooling solutions for optimal performance. **Rating:** 4.5/5 I would definitely purchase this processor again and recommend it to others seeking a high-performance CPU.
C**Y
Excellent
This was a tough choice, the 5800X3D was the other option. Since AM4 is to be retired and DDR5 prices are not to settle for at least a couple years (this is 04/2022), it was important to have something that could hold up under multiple scenarios and for that time. In the end the lack of overclocking, the low Turbo speed and the 'poorer' productivity showing of the 5800X3D swayed me towards the 5900X. The worst part of the experience was getting a standard AMD retail box, so 90% of the box is empty, wasted space. In this day and age it is criminal to waste these resources. The price was pretty good, 10% less than the 5800X3D and an additional 5% on the Prime card. The system is an Asus ROG Strix X470, Zotac 3080Ti Amp Holo and 16GB of Kingston HyperX Fury 3600MHz, plus a bunch of drives. Cooling is The Arctic Cooling 360mm AIO with push-pull fans, in a Fractal Meshify (V1). Runs a bit hot, but safe. About 145W peak with 50% CPU usage, with everything sticking to a single CCD if <12 threads. Safe to say that even with a GPU like the 3080Ti, everything is still heavily GPU limited when the settings are maxed out. For a gaming-only system the 5800X3D is probably the better choice. But even then, if your GPU is anything less than a 3080/6800XT with a 2K screen and maximum detail, you will be heavily GPU limited and the CPU will make very little difference (except a few edge cases). For mixed workloads the 5900X is better - we run a lot of simulation software and those love frequency, but can also saturate all cores on occasion. Peak turbo is important, and the earlier Intel 9900 was not able to keep up as the complexity grew. Overall, pretty stoked with the purchase.
U**.
Fantastic CPU, but runs hot
Amazing performance. Has no trouble in turboing to 4.7GHz and can also reach 4.9GHz if overclocked properly. The only downside is that it runs hot. Considering a few things we can justify the high temps: 1. The ambient temperature of my location stays above 30 degrees 2. The base clock is 3.7GHz which makes the CPU run on the warmer side during idle But the chip is very efficient when under load. It might run 45-50 degrees idle but won’t cross 75 on a decent cooler with 100% CPU load. Absolute beast of a processor.
R**T
Better than Intel
It's a best performance cpu in the price range. Don't think just go for it if your budget is around 30k for processor.
N**H
Amazing
This is the beast processor available in market, don't think about Intel, AMD has already surpassed. Amazing performance but you have to use AIO, this is not optional. Thank you
V**R
Excellent product and services
Excellent product and services
A**R
Processor is good, fan missing
CPU fan is Missing in the packaging.
S**V
Msi B450 gaming pro carbon max wifi
Using on my Msi B450 gaming pro carbon max WIFI after update my bios to latest one its working good without any issue any issue
ا**ى
اعتذر عن طلب الاسترجاع . تبين لى ان المنتج ممتاز و يعمل بكفاءة ارجو الغاء طلب الاسترجاع
S**E
Liebe den Prozessor hat ein Gute Leistung und für Arbeiten oder Gaming einfach Top. Ob ich mit Photshop oder After effects oder Maya/ Blender ich kannn Multiple Fenster auf haben ohne dass er struggelt. Ist aber auch abhängig wieviel Arbeitspeicher oder was für ein Mainboard du hast. Preis Leistung war auch Top. Ich liebe AMD dafür, du kriegst was für dein Geld auch was.
S**.
Arrived, in good shape, no problems Remember to keep Microsoft credentials at hand when swapping ;)
K**U
AM4からAM5になり7000.9000シリーズになりましたが、パーツ代がとても高いですよね?5000シリーズでも充分に作業、ゲームもサクサクこなせます。 動画編集ならRyzen9 5900X または5950X ゲームならRyzen7 5700X3Dまたは5800X3Dで楽しめます。 AM5対応マザーボードはま高いです。 AM4対応ならばB550が手軽な値段で購入が出来ますよ。
S**G
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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