





🔥 Dominate your digital domain with Ryzen 7 1800X power ⚡
The AMD Ryzen 7 1800X is a high-performance 8-core, 16-thread processor built on the advanced 'Zen' architecture, delivering up to 4.0 GHz turbo frequency. Featuring AMD SenseMI adaptive technology and unlocked multiplier for overclocking, it supports DDR4 memory and operates at a 95W thermal design power, making it ideal for gamers, creators, and multitasking professionals seeking powerful, efficient computing.




| ASIN | B06W9JXK4G |
| Are Batteries Included | No |
| Best Sellers Rank | 180,477 in Computers & Accessories ( See Top 100 in Computers & Accessories ) 637 in CPUs |
| Brand | AMD |
| Colour | Black |
| Computer Memory Type | DDR4 SDRAM |
| Customer Reviews | 4.2 4.2 out of 5 stars (821) |
| Date First Available | 15 Feb. 2017 |
| Guaranteed software updates until | unknown |
| Hardware Platform | PC |
| Item Weight | 100 g |
| Item model number | YD180XBCAEWOF |
| Manufacturer | AMD |
| Memory Clock Speed | 32 MHz |
| Memory Technology | DDR4 |
| Processor Brand | AMD |
| Processor Count | 8 |
| Processor Socket | Socket AM4 |
| Processor Speed | 3.6 GHz |
| Processor Type | Ryzen 7 |
| Product Dimensions | 13.46 x 6.86 x 13.46 cm; 100 g |
| Series | YD180XBCAEWOF |
| Wattage | 95 watts |
R**.
AMD Ryzen 7 1800X. A superb 8 core, 16 thread Central Processor.
AMD Ryzen 7 1800X. It is great to have a truly fast CPU in a system with plenty of memory. This CPU handles 64GB of DDR4 RAM, which is what we have installed. It works very well and with water-cooling does not get even warm most of the time and that is at 3,600 MHz. We are pleased we chose this model, it is a superb processor, AMD have once more at least caught up with Intel, and at a more reasonable price. 16 processing threads allow serious virtual computing, in excess of the number of guest operating system we are ever likely to need. Highly recommended.
N**N
Well I can definitely recommend this CPU if your workload is based on multi ...
Well I can definitely recommend this CPU if your workload is based on multi core application like VM s CAD or anything workstation related. It's also good for gaming , streaming and video editing of course, but keep in mind that some applications don't use all the cores and that will seem slower than the counter-part intel i7 witch this competes against. So if you re looking for something strictly for gaming go for the i7 or even i5 , those perform better at higher refresh rates <100hz , but if you don't play on high refresh rate monitor and you have some work to do that involves a lot of loading and you can take advantage of all the cores(in my case game dev) then I would recommend this, stable and powerful. 10/10 , great purchase , everything is as it should be and with this discount is a no brainer. Keep in mind that the new Ryzen 2 refresh will come in this April so if you are patient , you might get better performance for the same money.
M**T
Great cpu
Bought this cpu a few months ago because I didn't want to have to upgrade my motherboard to get a 2700 as had originally planned. I do regret that decision but only because it would be better future proofing. I currently have this cpu over clocked to 4ghz on air cooling and it runs at acceptable temps, it runs everything I throw at it without issue except a little slow down when streaming cemu games in 4k through my shield to my TV but I think that's more my cemu config than cpu deficiencies. Great cpu, particularly now its dropping in price.
R**2
One word: Amazing!
I bought this to upgrade my aging i7 processor which was really struggling to handle heavily edited and graded 4k footage. Before I had to rely on a proxy workflow as I wasn't even able to scrub through my video without heavily dropped frames. Now I can happily say that I have no issues scrubbing through various 4k footage taken from multiple different cameras (Sony, Panasonic, Mavic, and GoPro). The 1800x has really become a big time saver as I don't even need to use proxies 95% of the time. I was contemplating on getting the i7 8700k, which based on what I have read, performs better than the 1800x. However, I decided to go with AMD for multiple reasons: 1. AMD will be releasing new AM4 socket processors until at least 2020. That means I don't have to spend additional money buying another motherboard 2. Two more cores makes this more future proof than the 8700k's 6 cores. Im betting on the fact that the 1800x loses out to the 8700k in multithreaded applications due to poor optimization on the software side. As more cores become the norm, applications will begin to fully utilize the extra cores. 3. I was worried about how Spectre and Meltdown will impact the performance on the 8700k once Intel chips get patched. 4. Support AMD to promote computer competitiveness. I would give the 1800x 4.5 stars because it doesn't overclock well. I managed to only get 4ghz stable and unless you won the chipset lottery, you would be hard pressed to get anything stable beyond 4ghz. Memory support is also lacking - I have 32gb of Corsair Vengeance 3200mhz but i can only clock it to 2400mhz. This is disappointing because Ryzen processors really perform at their best with higher clocked memory due to the infinity fabric. It is not really AMD's fault for the lack of memory support, as most memory manufacturers are optimized to run on Intel due to Intel's sheer dominance over the years. And forget trying another set of memory, have you seen the prices (thank you crypto miners!). Anyways, I am extremely happy and impressed with this chip and big props to AMD for finally releasing a product that is competitive with Intel. I am excited to see what they have in store for the future.
C**S
CPU
It is no good if you want to upgrade to windows 11 also my games freeze
Z**Y
Fast, compatible and reliable. Much better value than Intel
Yes you could buy a 1700 and overclock it, though you don't know how fast that will run. I picked the 1800X on the theory its better quality silicon and prefer to stick near the official clock speed for reliability. The high thread count really comes into it's own for work. As a developer running lots of tasks locally, using docker etc, a higher thread count is ideal. I switched from Xeon to Ryzen and have noticed no difference in reliability and no issues with compatibility. The only thing around that's any better is Threadripper which is so much more money and is 2 of these stuck together and do you REALLY need THAT many threads?
A**N
Good Processor, Value for Money
Capable of close to top end gaming (being used during end of 2018) This part is the bottleneck of my current PC, so is the perfect system to push this processor in its maximum paces. Runs ARMA3 PUBG, City Skylines, Planet Coaster, Wreckfest all on top settings with plenty going on. Running with a 1080ti GTX, 32gb 3200mhz RAM and installs all on SSD's. Apparently this is overclock able and I haven't even looked into needing it yet.
S**H
I simply cannot express how amazing this is
This processor is a powerhouse. I simply cannot express how amazing this is. I have upgraded from an I5 4970k, not only does this processor beat my old on gaming performance, but it also makes any form of multitasking on my machine a dream. I do not get ANY stutters on any of my games, no matter what I am doing. Honestly this is amazing. I will update my review in the future if I have any issues at all.
モ**フ
Core i5 3570 から乗り換えました。 自宅でプログラマをしており このCPUで組んだPCと向き合って一日の大半を過ごしています。 すべての局面においてサクサクで 8コア16スレッドの余裕を感じます。 GTX 970 を積んでゲームもしてますが不足は全く感じません。 ゲームではほぼクラボで決まるようです。 難点について。かなり特殊な局面ですが mac を Windows 上のVMWare で動かす場合 Ryzen はかなり工夫が必要です。 買った当初はほぼ初物で不安もありましたが これにして良かったです。AMDありがとう。 2019 年予定の Zen2 にアップグレード可能なので、そちらにも期待しています。
R**N
Fantastic AMD processor, it's really nice
P**O
Con esta gama de procesadores el debate Intel vs AMD ya no es tanto por el "quien es más rápido" sino el "para qué voy a usar el procesador". Si tus tareas no aprovechan los núcleos del procesador, los nuevos Intel (8700k y compañía) serían más rápidos, pero en procesamiento multinúcleo el Ryzen hoy en día no tiene rival. Respecto a los errores en los procesadores, buscando en Internet "Ryzen segfault" se puede encontrar toda la información al respecto. En mi caso, compré uno hace algo menos de un mes y, al enterarme del bug, lo he devuelto y lo he intentado con una segunda compra, que me llegó ayer. Con esta segunda compra, confirmo que Amazon a día de hoy todavía está vendiendo los procesadores con el error en cuestión. Para identificarlo basta con ver la identificación serigrafiada del procesador: SKU: ....... BATCH: UA 1706PGT (La línea que interesa y que viene con este formato UA [año 2 dígitos][semana 2 dígitos] [3 letras]) SERIAL: ...... Para este ejemplo, el procesador estaría fabricado en la semana 6 del año 2017. Se conoce que todos los procesadores anteriores a la semana 25 están afectados por el bug (Amazon me ha enviado procesadores de las semanas 18 y 19). Buscando en Internet también se puede ver que AMD reemplaza estos procesadores si gestionas con ellos una devolución en garantía (RMA), que será lo que haga en mi caso, puesto que creo que es un buen procesador. Tambien decir que hay que seleccionar con cuidado el resto del hardware, especialmente la memoria que se le vaya a instalar. Por ejemplo, con una Corsair Vengeance LED - Kit de Memoria Entusiasta (16 GB, 2 x 8 GB, DDR4, 3200 MHz, C16, XMP 2.0), color negro con azul LED Iluminación , que supuestamente funciona a 3200 MHz, se bloqueaba el ordenador a esa velocidad (en una placa Gigabyte GA-AX370-GAMING-K7 AMD X370 Socket AM4 ATX - Placa base (DDR4-SDRAM, DIMM, 2133,2400,2933,3200,3400,3600 MHz, Dual, 64 GB, AMD) ) y tuve que cambiarlas por unas G Skill F4-3200C14D-16GFX - Tarjeta de memoria de 16 GB, color negro . Con estas últimas, ha sido activar el perfil XMP para que operen a 3200 MHz y funcionan a la perfección. Y hasta aquí la historia para montar un ordenador con AMD Ryzen (bueno, me falta el paso del cambio en garantía). Un 10 para Amazon porque en este caso sí que he tenido que tirar de su servicio de cambios de producto y devoluciones y ningún problema al respecto.
A**M
Coming from a Phenom II X4 that could get to 3.8 GHz on a great day, this is a crazy jump in speed. The last 2 systems that I have built for friends were both i7 7700k, but I insisted upon waiting for AMD. I have this at 3.95 GHz on 1.38V, with 63C under a Prime95 smallFFT load or 57C under a Prime95 blended load under a Corsair 115i GTX with 70F ambient. I was able to get 4.1 GHz Prime95 smallFFT stable for an hour, but this was mostly because I didn't grasp how the voltage controls worked in UEFI and the chip was pushing itself to insane voltages (I saw 1.5-1.6 on HWMon, and all of the other values that it has shown me for voltages have been accurate, temps were 72-74C with +20C offset taken into account). 3.95GHz/1.38 represents my comfort point for a daily driver. Have not been able to get it to POST with memory clocked higher than 2667, though I have a 64 GB kit and have not tried loosening timings or going over stock volts on the RAM. I am running the 4/6/17 BIOS on an ASUS Prime x370 board, and will wait to see what the May update brings before I push the RAM too hard. GF has a 7700k under water (Corsair h110i), and we will put my RX480 in that when Vega comes out. That will allow us to properly OC her rig with the IGP turned off, which should be really interesting for benchmarking the two top of the line desktop chips head to head with max OCs in place. I am getting set up to run a large slate of audio conversion (I use MediaMonkey gold to convert my FLAC collection to store on my mobile devices), and if I can think of a way to post that as a sort of competitive benchmark I will. For that kind of load, this chip really shines. For gaming, a 1600X or 1500X is far more bang for your buck.
V**O
siempre eh sido del equipo azul y cambie mi i7-4770k por este ryzen y no puedo estar mas satisfecho. aunque la velocidad del procesador esta abajo del i7-4770k que era de 4.6ghz, el ryzen funciona perfectamente a 4ghz con un watercooler y para el dia a dia es mas que suficiente. en cuanto a estabilidad sin overclock no ai problema y se mantiene en una temperatura ide de 36 a 40 grados y en uso hasta unos 75 grados. con el overclock tiende a estar entre 60 y 80 grados. recomendado para un upgrade sobretodo y usas maquinas virtuales este procesador te da hasta 16 threads!
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