Testseek.co.uk have collected 238 expert reviews of the AMD Ryzen 5 1400 3.2GHz Socket AM4 and the average rating is 81%. Scroll down and see all reviews for AMD Ryzen 5 1400 3.2GHz Socket AM4.
June 2017
(81%)
238 Reviews
Average score from experts who have reviewed this product.
Users
-
0 Reviews
Average score from owners of the product.
810100238
The editors liked
Incredible value for money
Quad-Core for Dual-Core (Intel) prices
AM4 Platform
Overclocks easily on B350 or X370
Ideal for HD gaming systems
Easy to manage thermals
Highly competitive performance
Well rounded platform cost
Easy to overclock
Sense MI technologies
Delivers more cores to the mainstream
The editors didn't like
None
“Overall
The AMD Ryzen R5 1400 may not be the fastest chip in the world. However
Its performance far exceeds what you would expect given its retail price. However
It’s by far one of the best budget chips we’ve seen in many years.”
Abstract: Let's take a few moments and go back to August, 2016 when AMD announced the “ZEN” Core architecture (‘designed from the ground up with optimal balance of performance and power') at the Hot Chips 28 Symposium on High Performance Chips. At the Symposium, AM...
Published: 2017-05-14, Author: stefan , review by: madshrimps.be
Ryzen 5 1400 SKU is the least expensive processor from the series you can get right now, which does come with half of the L3 cache, a base clock of 3.2GHz, an all-core clock of the same 3.2GHz, a 2-core boost of 3.4GHz while the single-core boost does add...
Published: 2017-05-08, Author: Mark , review by: arstechnica.com
Remarkable multithreaded performance, More core and threads than the competition, 1600X on par with a stock i5 7600K in gaming, The full-featured AM4 platform, Excellent value for money
Questions remain over gaming performance, Some early adopter quirks linger, Overclocking not as strong as Kaby Lake
Published: 2017-04-26, Author: Steven , review by: techspot.com
The Ryzen 5 1400 is a phenomenal value vs. competing quadcore chips. Strong productivity and minimum fps performance, overclocks well, runs more efficiently than the Core i57400
To truly talk about the bottom line when it comes to the AMD Ryzen 5, we need to look at its product stack and pricing.Now let's look at where the Intel 7600K and 7700K are priced. That would be $239/$249 and $346 respectively. While we did not bring Inte...
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Published: 2017-04-11, Author: Ian , review by: anandtech.com
We have already shown in previous reviews that the Zen microarchitecture from AMD is around the equivalent of Intel's Broadwell microarchitecture, but at this lower price point we have AMD's Zen against Intel's Kaby Lake, which is two generations newer th...
Published: 2017-04-11, Author: Tom , review by: overclock3d.net
Abstract: Since the launch of the FX8 series of processors AMD have fallen into the sector of the market that is best described by the old "good value for money" adage, which is usually a pejorative way of saying that the performance wasn't all that but they're che...
Published: 2017-04-11, Author: Bruno , review by: reviewstudio.net
performance, overclocking, power consumption, value
AMD Ryzen 7 produced a revolution in the 8-core area, offering at least the same performance as Intel LGA2011 counterparts, but at half price. Now Ryzen 5 came to compete with LGA1151 solutions, and AMD banged Intel's head again with 1600X, a 6-core/12-th...
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(95%)
Published: 2017-04-09, Author: Patrick , review by: servethehome.com
The AMD Ryzen 5 1400 we had hoped would be a clear winner. If you are looking to pair a system with 4GB of RAM and a low-cost motherboard and GPU to get a sub-400 system, it is compelling. As specs and price for the rest of the system increase, it gets ha...
Abstract: I'm going to start this article off with a simple number: five. Not only is that the number of months it has taken AMD to effectively turn the x86 processor world on its ear, but that's also the number of distinct model families that they've introduced...