Testseek.fr ont rassemblé 293 examens experts du AMD Ryzen 7 1700X 3.4GHz Socket AM4 et l'estimation moyenne est 87%. Faites descendre l'écran et voyez les toutes les revues pour AMD Ryzen 7 1700X 3.4GHz Socket AM4 .
March 2017
(87%)
293 Avis
Note moyenne issue des avis d’experts sur ce produit.
Utilisateurs
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0 Avis
Note moyenne délivrée par les utilisateurs du produit.
870100293
Les éditeurs ont aimé
Grosses nouveautés architecturales côté rouge
Performances dantesques en applicatif multithread
Rapport Perf/prix en applicatif très intéressant
Ratio perf/conso Out of the Box ahurissant
Soudure en indium températures polaires
Performances excell
Ratio/Perforamnce prix
Bonne fréquence de base
Overclocking facile
Plateforme peu coûteuse et facile à exploiter
Rapport performances prix
Segmentation tarifaire judicieuse
Performances en rendu 3D
Performances en encodage vidéo
Performances élevées dans l'absolu
Les éditeurs n'ont pas aimé
Absence d'iGPU
Tension à optimiser pour en tirer le meilleur
Potentiel d'Overclocking de l'archi assez faible finalement
Mauvaises puces
Temp et conso supérieus aux autres à fréquence égale
Performances en retrait dans certains jeux
Plus de variabi
Chauffe
Performances dans les jeux
Performances légèrement en retrait lorsque le système mémoire est mis à rude contribution
AMD sees Ryzen 7 processors as being the perfect fit for multi-threaded (nT) work with slightly lower single threaded (1T) performance. Our testing shows that is true for the most part. In applications where all cores are being used the 8-Core, 16-Thread...
Publié: 2017-03-02, Auteur: Marco , review by: hothardware.com
Strong Overall Performance, 8-Cores / 16-Threads, Power Friendly, Aggressive Pricing
Issues In A Few Benchmarks, Unimpressive Overclocking In Early Stages
It's not all good news, though. With some legacy apps, audio encoding, lower-res gaming, and platform level tests, Ryzen trailed Intel – sometimes by a wide margin. There is obviously still optimization work that needs to be done – from both AMD and softw...
I thought that the Ryzen 7 1800X was a great CPU, that is why I gave it the second highest award we offer at TweakTown. It's a great CPU that does very well against Intel's HEDT's 8-core CPUs and does so at a remarkably lower price. However, that price, $...
Extrait: 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...
Looking back at how things played out over the course of this review, I have no doubt it will be one of the most hotly debated articles that I've written in the last few months, maybe even the last year. There's no denying that the Zen architecture has pr...
At the beginning of this review I mentioned the delays which plagued our 1700X and 1700 samples but looking back, that extra time to digest Ryzen has proven to be beneficial. Now that everyone has had time to take a breather and let some of the emotions s...
Great multi-threaded performance, Economical unlocked 8-core CPU
Ecosystem still to mature, Still not completely optimised for gaming
From what we've seen with the benchmarks, AMD's Ryzen 7 series offer a lot better performance given their much lower price point. Anomalies were plenty with some of the newer benchmarks with the Ryzen 5 processors which proved to be better. AMD's gain is...
While the numbers are impressive, gaming performance of Ryzen processors still leaves a lot to be desired. Not to mention that games are yet to be optimized for the Ryzen processors and DX 12, which can lead to better utilization of multiple CPU cores. Th...
The AMD Ryzen 7 1700X retails at just RM 1,899 but when you compare price to performance, it floors the Ryzen 7 1800X as they're near identical but with the Ryzen 7 1700X running slightly cooler due to the lowered clock speed. My only dislike towards the...