- Aug 25, 2001
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Tech Yes City on YT recently did a vid about dead 3600 CPUs shpwing up.
Are we seeing results of "early aging" issues with Ryzen?
Not a fan of Florida Man I take it?Salazar is the last tech-tuber I would listen to.
Nah, we're doing this again!Are we really doing this again?
I would go further and question those very low failure rates and examine whether they were caused by autooc functions on motherboards. Ai tuning is another term for it.Nah, we're doing this again!
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Ryzen 5000 failure rates: We reality-check the claims
One system vendor reported that Ryzen 5000 chips are failing at a high rate. Our sources and others suggest the problem is isolated.www.pcworld.com
Raises hand..Can't stand the wanker. Can't think of any troublesome Ryzen processors apart from 1st gen with the segfault bug.
And how would you go about doing that on a dead processor?I would go further and question those very low failure rates and examine whether they were caused by autooc functions on motherboards. Ai tuning is another term for it.
Possibly, but then fault would lie on the board makers.Many of the top comments offer good hypothesis concerning SoC being damaged by overvolting, and IHS issues. I have had a few boards that were concerningly aggressive OOB. By Zen+ I had taken to setting everything manually in the UEFI because of that.
Pop in a similar processor and view the bios settings. All aib are pushing stupid autooc aioc now that's constantly bumping the voltage up and down, thermal action causes more aggressive behavior. Can't say much about your 5600g though. You're maybe the 2nd person I've spoken to who had them.And how would you go about doing that on a dead processor?
I thought that as well, after seeing his video I'm not so sure anymore. The title of the video is This is Why Ryzen 5 3600s Are FAILING! yet the content in that video does not provide any serious evidence for either failure rate or failure reason. He even goes on to say that high 90C+ temps will likely lead to Ryzen 5000 failed chips, in spite of the fact that AMD themselves say 95C is typical and despite the fact that most Intel CPUs are currently configured to run close to 100C as well.but TYC seems legit overall.
You see i did that.Pop in a similar processor and view the bios settings. All aib are pushing stupid autooc aioc now that's constantly bumping the voltage up and down, thermal action causes more aggressive behavior. Can't say much about your 5600g though. You're maybe the 2nd person I've spoken to who had them.
I made a 5600g system for a friend, it is all working very nicely five months later.You're maybe the 2nd person I've spoken to who had them.
I have had a 5700G for well over a year now. PBO with +200MHz boost - iGPU@2400MHz and with 32GB of 3600MT/s - SAM enabled, I just got a legendary score in 3DMark Night Raid. BTW with 32GB on the ASRock Fatal1ty B450 GAMING-ITX/AC, it auto allocates it as a 4GB GPU. Which is good, because that setting is missing in the UEFI.I made a 5600g system for a friend, it is all working very nicely five months later.
I usually tell people to avoid launch period hardware because even if it passes the smell test it may not work out. It's a recommendation spawned from days old where if you didn't say a few prayers your hardware would catch on fire if you looked at ir wrong.You see i did that.
I replaced the first one right away with a 5600G for about 2 weeks ran fine, and then did a return on it to a 5600X because i wanted the PCI-E 4.0 and she needed a dedicated video card.
The other 5600G which got RMA'd was swapped out to my older 3600X and my cousin refused to give it back saying it felt snapper then the 5600G, which of course i also loaned / gave him a cheap dedicated card.
The replacement 5600G has been working in my friends system so far without complaint when i sold him that cpu.
The two faulty CPU's were bought at near time from AMAZON. I got them earily and was intending on holding onto them for office machines, until family members wanted them. The CPU's i believe were from the initial launch.
Im pretty sure they were most likely same BIN as well, or at the very least same FAB machine.
Both CPU's were on a B550 chipset, so it was a newer chipset.
Both systems are still running perfectly fine on the same B550.
This lead me to the conclusion, that i had a bad batch, or there is a bad batch of 5600G, as AMD immediately advance RMA'd me the moment i said i lost a 5600G and told them exactly what issues i had.
IF the issues were board side fault, there would of been bios revisions to address that issues but i do not see any critical updates.
I just think the fault lies at TSMC during that time, and probably one of there FAB machines.
They either probably validated the CPU very poorly, or probably didn't have enough time to validate it properly, and hence it sneaked by the QC, and made it to circulation.
Ah, the days of ye old raid arrays on consumer boards.I usually tell people to avoid launch period hardware because even if it passes the smell test it may not work out. It's a recommendation spawned from days old where if you didn't say a few prayers your hardware would catch on fire if you looked at ir wrong.
Last 3 PC components I bought from Ebay were all defective or DOA. And 4 of the last 6. I am over the used market, outside of forums. Not worth my time and effort to go through the return process. Never gotten anything that needed more than TLC, from tech forums.The last two CPUs I have gotten from eBay have been dead.
A 12500t and a 3700X.
After years of getting fully functional and cheap cpus I am a bit miffed. I mean, they don't even have pins any more!
FWIW, I’ve had zero issues with eBay return policy. Even items marked no returns - eBay approved it and refunded me when the package was delivered. That’s the only reason I’ll keep shopping there, but it’s been a bad run after years of zero issues for me.Last 3 PC components I bought from Ebay were all defective or DOA. And 4 of the last 6. I am over the used market, outside of forums. Not worth my time and effort to go through the return process. Never gotten anything that needed more than TLC, from tech forums.
Until the last 6 months or so, I'd had one or two bad used items in 23yrs of using Ebay. I have gotten a DOA PSU, DOA RAM twice, and a defective RTX 3060. No more used parts on Ebay for me for a good long while. Doesn't matter how good the return process is, I don't want to go through it anymore.Yikes. I have been pretty lucky with ebay parts lately. My 5950X was from there, as well as 8 Samsung ECC RDIMMs, and 2 DIMMs of Patriot Viper that I added to another PC. My two Xeon X5660s and my Xeon E5-1660V3 as well. The Vega 64 Nitro I had and later traded for a 5700XT was from ebay, as well as two of my Sapphire 290 Tri X cards. All these worked fine for me.
I usually tell people to avoid launch period hardware because even if it passes the smell test it may not work out. It's a recommendation spawned from days old where if you didn't say a few prayers your hardware would catch on fire if you looked at ir wrong.