Are Ryzen 5000 chips failing? We looked into the original story and the issues around quality control at system vendors, and the problem may not be as bad as it initially appeared. Read on to learn more.The kerfuffle kicked off on Sunday, when system builder PowerGPU Tweeted to its 222,000 followers: “The failure on the new AMD CPUs are still too high.” The company said that of the 320 Ryzen 5000-series CPUs it had received, 19 were “DOA” (dead on arrival), an eyebrow-raising six-percent failure rate. The company also said it had seen three to five failing B550- and X570-based motherboards a week. HotHardware’s Paul Lilly initially covered the tweet, which became even more controversial when PowerGPU deleted the Tweet on Monday. PowerGPU then tweeted that “We just had a chat with AMD. We are going to work together testing out some CPUs and motherboards.”To read this article in full, please click here https://www.pcworld.com/article/3608349/ryzen-5000-failure-rates-we-reality-check-the-claims.html#tk.rss_all
Login to add comment
Other posts in this group
The all-new Ecobee Essential smart thermostat Ecobee unveiled at CES
Nvidia is truly masterful at one thing: perfectly showcasing the grap
The annual Consumer Electronics Show is always a massive event that s
TL;DR: Get 10TB of secure cloud storage for life thr
TP-Link’s Tapo smart home ecosystem gained a host of new products at
What could be cooler than a smart home? A move-in ready, energy-effic
As the new Trump administration prepares to take office, the Consumer